Difference between revisions of "Talk:Communism"

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:::::::Here is the [https://conservapedia.com/index.php?title=Special:ListUsers&group=sysop list of CP Admin.]  If anyone of these Admins uses the Revert button, i.e., not "Undo", you are free to ask on the talk page of that same article why.  Simple rule: Do Not Undo a Revert. Secondly, Undoing an 'Undo' without discussion on talk page is initiating an edit war.  [[User:RobSmith|RobS]]<sup>[[User talk:RobSmith|Free Kyle!]]</sup>
 
:::::::Here is the [https://conservapedia.com/index.php?title=Special:ListUsers&group=sysop list of CP Admin.]  If anyone of these Admins uses the Revert button, i.e., not "Undo", you are free to ask on the talk page of that same article why.  Simple rule: Do Not Undo a Revert. Secondly, Undoing an 'Undo' without discussion on talk page is initiating an edit war.  [[User:RobSmith|RobS]]<sup>[[User talk:RobSmith|Free Kyle!]]</sup>
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::::::::I still don't buy it. On Simpsons Wiki, we had an admin outright vandalize the entire wiki due to throwing a fit, basically changing it to claim it dealt with AIDS. And we also had something similar happen across Wikia at the time when some admin jerks at the Mass Effect Wiki decided to vandalize whole Wiki sites enmasse. If anything, stuff like that is one reason a rule of not reverting an Admin shouldn't exist. Let's suppose I were a CP Admin, and I decided to vandalize a page thinking as an admin, I could do so. Would you follow the rule and avoid reverting my edit under any circumstances, or would you do whatever it takes to stop vandalism? Me? I'd probably do whatever it takes to restore edits and undo vandalism, even if said vandalism was done by an admin. [[User:Pokeria1|Pokeria1]] ([[User talk:Pokeria1|talk]]) 20:12, 2 May 2021 (EDT)

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Contents

Say something meaningful

I recently judged several exhibits for the national history day. These were not about Communism but instead about Adolf Hitler, though the problems they had are also here in this article about communism. The problem with all of them is that everyone thinks its sufficient to say that Hitler was evil to have said something meaningful. Obviously this is not enough. Everyone has said this there's no unique analysis in it or really an analysis at all. Its all just emotive. Likewise the problem with this article is that there really isn't much in the way of analysis. All that is said is communism bad (be verbs such as is are over rated) again and again and again. Yes there are facts and statistics and that's great but really i think you've crossed an academic line here where your no longer explaining why things are bad (or perhaps good if you were to be a communist though given the setting i find this to be unlikely) but are instead just asserting that they are along with a few statistics. What this article needs in an in depth explanation of how communism functions both theoretically and in the real world. Therese nothing here about Marx's philosophy (though the article on Marx is much better than this one). Communism means more than the Soviet Union and China. Also i think there needs to be a section on primal communism (hunter gatherers) and interpretations as to weather or not they count as a communist society.

Primitive behaviour is strictly nothing to do with the Marxist-Leninist communism we treat here. I think that the points are adequately made that the materialist, atheist and dirigiste aspects of Communism appeal to those of little natural ability and enable them to gain coercive powers to destroy freedom. Hitler and the Nazis were forged in the same mould. CedP 12:15, 26 February 2009 (EST)


totalitarian nightmare

I think that the "Christian sharing" section is out of place here. It gives a false impression that Communism - i.e., Marxism-Leninism - is in any way related to the voluntary sharing of "Christian communism". The latter is a form of communitarianism.

Communism is a totalitarian nightmare, as Orwell chillingly portrayed it in 1984. I've read books on Soviet, Chinese, Cuban, Vietnamese and North Korean life. I've met refugees from various communist countries and in 1992 personally visited 4 former Soviet SSR's. It's hell on earth.

Not that democracy is Heaven, but:

  1. The Iron Curtain was to keep people in (see also Berlin Wall).
  2. Refugees mainly want to come to America and Britain.

Am I biased on this? I have made up my mind, but it is based purely on the objective facts. Anyway, I do look forward to working cooperatively with other editors here. Just don't try any liberal tricks. This is a subject I know thoroughly. I have books and references. --Ed Poor 22:53, 28 March 2007 (EDT)

I agree with you completely, and I urge you to improve this article as well.

It's funny that you bring this up because I just wrote the Berlin Wall stub this afternoon. MountainDew 22:54, 28 March 2007 (EDT)

I think we must distinguish between the concepts that communism supposedly follows, and the fascist regimes that call themselves "communist" (USSR, China, etc.) because there is quite an important distinction between the two. You can't really disagree with this. --Hojimachongtalk 23:05, 28 March 2007 (EDT)
I'm with you 100%, been there, got the tee shirt (and the sweat shirt, and the gold-embossed mug), etc. I have personally met the author of Communism: Promise and Practice. --Ed Poor 23:08, 28 March 2007 (EDT)
  • Well, this may be true, but the main point to be made is that even with total control of a nation's populous Communism (Marx & Engel's version) doesn't really work "outside of the laboratory". This may reflect an element of biological evolution wherein a person's genetic desire to be the "fittest" precludes an egalitarian and altruistic society; i.e. why should I help those who aren't of my genetic lineage by this "sharing" or pooling of resources. Sometimes it is a benefit to do so, and so we do to some extent, but a full fledged society goes against evolutionary forces. MOO -- Rob PommerTALK 23:14, 28 March 2007 (EDT)
If God and Heaven did not exist, it would merely be an odd coincidence. --Ed Poor 22:56, 28 March 2007 (EDT)


That stuff comes from early Marxist writings, and dedicated Marxists still cite it today. RobS 22:55, 28 March 2007 (EDT)

OK, here's a better quote from Toynbee,

"According to the Communist prophet's intuition ...the class-war is bound to issue in a victorious proletarian revolution.... A time is to come when....the New Society of the Marxian Millennium will be able to cast away not only 'the Dictatorship of the Proletariat' but also every other institutional crutch, including the State itself; for in that Marxian earthly paradise to come 'they neither marry nor are given in marriage' RobS 23:12, 28 March 2007 (EDT)

Sheesh! People as lab rats ... it doesn't even work *in* the lab ... all the poor rats keep trying to escape. Just think about 2 sets of borders: one, when you cross it you're a refugee or defector - the other, when you cross it you're a welcome immigrant.

Who ever heard of someone crossing the Gulf of Mexico in a raft to escape into Cuba? And don't get me started on Vietnam - I read Le Gulag Vietnamien and even met the author Doan Van Toai in Boston. Read about him here. --Ed Poor 23:22, 28 March 2007 (EDT)

Picture

I don't think you need the hammer and sickle to spin... I'm replacing the picture. Marl Karx 14:12, 11 April 2007 (EDT)

Communism in the history of political thought (Draft)

(I'm trying to come up with a concise chapter on the history of communism, but don't have time to complete it. This is part of the draft. Please feel free to edit as if this were part of the article. When it's done I'll copy and paste it in to the main text.)

Communism as an idea was born out of the Industrial Revolutions in Europe in the 19th century. At the beginning of the century, workers in industrial nations such as Britain began to organise themselves in to co-operative societies, for the purposes of providing members with a fair price for staple goods and for the support of members who were unable to work, either because of difficulties finding employment or sickness.

These societies were often formed as a reaction to predatory employers, who would pay workers solely in vouchers to be spent at the company store, making competition impossible and enabling the employer to fleece employees. Leaders of the co-operative movement, such as Robert Owen, abhorred such practice and wished to reorganise society along similar lines to their own movement. In 1826, Owen wrote "There is but one mode by which man can possess in perpetuity all the happiness which his nature is capable of enjoying, — that is by the union and co-operation of all for the benefit of each." (cite ISBN when I dig out my copy)

Communism is responsible for the democide of 100 million plus lives in very recent memory, and one quarter of the planet remains enslaved under it. Dressing it up as anything else border's on Holocuast denial. Let's stick to the facts on this sad chapter of human history, and not try to present it as anything other than what it is--a failed attempt by atheists and rationalists to dominate the human race and exterminate anyone who opposed them. RobS 16:41, 14 April 2007 (EDT)
Wow, is that a chip on your shoulder, or a huge boulder? These are the facts. Regardless of what you think of communism, it is important that historical information be included in any article in an encyclopaedia. Should we perhaps not include the history of the British Empire because it killed so many people?
Communism is an important part of the history of the 19th and 20th centuries, and is intertwined with the social and demographic trends of industrialisation. To ignore that history is to be doomed to repeat it. --Abrown 17:08, 14 April 2007 (EDT)
To ignore the real history of Communism, like ignoring the real history of Nazism, is to be doomed to repeat it. RobS 17:29, 14 April 2007 (EDT)

Robert Owens was a social reformer not a communist. His ideas come from the same roots as the British Labour Party. The reformers of Britain in the 19th Century and the Factory Acts which gave workers rights are based on Liberal ideas not Marxist. The Labour Party Nationalised transport, fossial fuel and created the National Health Service to provide free health care for all. Not because of Communism (they ejected communists from the party, would not support the General Strike of 1926) but because of Liberalism and Social equality. It is true that factory owners in the 19th Century were paying the workers in vouchers and docking wages at the drop of a hat so that workers owed the factory money. They even had inhouse dentists to ensure that workers didn't take unnecessary time off. However the Factory Acts (from 1833 onward) changed this and introduced free education for children as well as other measures to help workers and stop them from being exploited by the factory owners. We have to remember though that not all factory owners were the same and some did look after their workers very well. So please try not to mix social reform up with marxism and communism

Communist could be good

Communism idealistically is a good system. Everyone makes the same amount of money so the rich can't exploit the poor.--BushRules12 23:17, 28 April 2007 (EDT)

Picture

Don't you think we should use it's logo as the image at top? Why was it removed? Marl Karx 22:15, 24 May 2007 (EDT)

We are not here to promote, memorialize, or glorify a democidal subject. RobS 22:38, 24 May 2007 (EDT)
Accepting your premise that Communism is evil, and putting its logo at the top glorifies it, then shouldn't we remove the picture at the top of Nazi? Marl Karx 17:37, 3 June 2007 (EDT)
Who put it there? It was probably placed by some scumbag troll anyway. RobS 22:01, 3 June 2007 (EDT)

very biased

This article, although it holds much truth, should be changed to be more neutral in order to give people a good idea as to what communism is about.

Oh really? You don't think eyewitness testimony from the Gulags can't give us a good idea as to what communism is about? RobS 23:32, 24 May 2007 (EDT)

This is one of the rare occasions where wikipedia has a better definition. This has no inofrmation about communism as opposed to Wikipedia's "Communism is an ideology that seeks to establish a classless, stateless social organization based on common ownership of the means of production. It can be considered a branch of the broader socialist movement. Communism as a political goal is generally a conjectured form of future social organization, although Marxists have described early forms of human social organization as "primitive communism" This article we are discussing just states the death's and how it has been abused not the actual concept an that is NOT an unbiased source. BTW for the wikipedia article notice how they use words like SEEKS instead of has because it hasn't thats its goal. thatgamerguy

That speaks like present tense, "an ideology that seeks..."; we only deal with facts. Communism has had 150+ plus years to "seek" whatever it sought, and left a trail of corpses in its wake that made Hitler envious. RobS 00:35, 12 July 2007 (EDT)

In bad shape

From the very beginning, this article is terrible. Below is my proposed lead (feel free to edit):

Communism is a social and political ideology which advocates the establishment of a classless, stateless society, in which the population (the proletariat) has group ownership of the means of production. According to the communist ideology, once a communist utopia is achieved, political means such as government, military, and police will be archaic and unnecessary. While the theory of communism advocates fairness and equality, the modern practice of this ideology has been punctuated by censorship, violence, and oppression. the founders of modern communism were Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Other famous communists include Vladimir Lenin, Iosef Stalin, Mao Zedong, and Leon Trotsky.

--Hojimachongtalk 23:48, 24 May 2007 (EDT)

I like this lead, but I think the article looks ok. Whats there should stay. Engels founded it to, no?Богдан Talk 23:51, 24 May 2007 (EDT)
So should the capitalism article begin "The imperialist swine are evil money-grubbers"? I mean, stereotypes are bad; starting an article off with statistics based on a flawed practice of the theory is no way to go. And Marx was the better known than his co-author Engels, no? It is not "Engelsism", but "Marxism".--Hojimachongtalk 23:54, 24 May 2007 (EDT)
Quite true, he is better known. But credit should be given were credit is due. marxism includes the philosophy of Engels.Богдан Talk 23:58, 24 May 2007 (EDT)
Perhaps you misunderstood me. Your introduction should be incorporated. But the horrors of communism should not be discarded.Богдан Talk 00:01, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
Oh, of course they are to be included; I am just concerned that this article on a very important ideology begins with the victim statistics. --Ĥøĵĭmåçħôńğtalk 00:08, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
Certainly, that should be changed. Your introduction is nice, my compliments. It should be put inБогдан Talk 00:09, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
Feel free to edit it, I feel like it is lacking eloquence. --Ĥøĵĭmåçħôńğtalk 00:12, 25 May 2007 (EDT)

Sorry, this page is not going to be used as a forum for (a) advocacy, or (b) apologetics, for a democidal ideology. RobS 00:27, 25 May 2007 (EDT)

RobS, please attempt to distinguish between the theoretical ideals of communism and the flawed ways in which it has been practiced. We are not here to promote or frown upon anything; we are here to build an encyclopedia. It is not "apologetics" to state the basic beliefs of communists. --Ĥøĵĭmåçħôńğtalk 01:04, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
Hojimachong, Why don't you don't you go to the Nazi article and explain to us how they were misunderstood. RobS 11:45, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
RobS, does 'conservative' equate to close-minded (or even non-sensical)? The Nazis were not Communists, they were Socialists. A much more fair comparison would be to ask Hojimachong to go to the Christianity page and explain how modern 'Christians' have distorted the original message of Christ. Or perhaps one could go to the Nazi page and draw all of the valid comparisons between the Nazis and the current government of the United States (which is not meant to imply the government is run by Nazis, but there are valid comparisons). Or, in keeping with the bizarre theme of this silly page on Communism, one could begin the page about the United States by detailing all of the crimes committed by the US government. Things like the persecution of the Native Americans (unless 'Manifest Destiny' allows such democides), exploitation of industrial workers in the 1880s and 1890, exploitation of agricultural workers through today, internment camps, state-mandated and assisted apartheid, legalized abortion, etc. could be mentioned. However, they aren't! So why does the Communism page start in such a startling way?
Please, this is little more than Soviet & Communist holocaust denial, and discussion with such extremists should not be countenanced by CP Admins. They need to be blocked. RobS 13:33, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
Again I ask, does 'conservative' equate to close-minded (or even non-sensical)? How could one make it clear to you that the Soviets were most emphatically not Communists? Would you argue that it was Christians that were responsible for the slaughter of the pre-Columbian indigenous people of North and South America? You would probably claim that it was Conquistadors instead (unless you would deny that particular genocide). Just because the USSR was run by an organization calling themselves the 'Communist Party' doesn't mean they were Communists. Perhaps that's the point that needs to be made in an encyclopedia article. I'm not being an extremist; I'm taking perspective, attempting to view the circumstances outside of my bubble of personal ideology and life experiences. That's part of scholarship. If you are too confused or emotionally invested to understand that, I suggest that you are not fit to be editing this article.
I guess I'm just dense; is this like the debate "Does a ceramic yard toad belong in Catagory:Toads? RobS 16:18, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
No,it's not like that.
Is this page to be used as advocacy for other causes, then? Like exploiting developing countries, attempting to overthrow valid democracies, etc.? Just because people don't write your gospel, RobS, doesn't mean that they are writing ridiculous things. Perhaps you should find an encyclopedia and read about Communism. It is not practiced anywhere in the world today. Communism is a STATELESS economic system, there are no totalitarian governments that could run gulags, etc. That's the point Hojimachong is trying to make. Communism does not advocate violent revolution; Marxism advocates violent revolution to achieve Communism. If you can't recognize the difference you really need to step back and find a much broader literature base. Indeed, by improving this article along the lines that Hojimachong suggests, other people would perhaps be able to better understand the difference by reading the Conservapedia! Isn't that what the point is: getting out unbiased, factual information to dispel the myths propagated by leftist, godless, non-Americans? Show people what real communism is in contrast to the socialist regimes implemented in North Korea, Cuba, et al.
  • I would say an encyclopedia is here to deal with facts. Since I do not know of a pure Marxist Communist state having ever existed, how does on craft an article about something that has never existed or been practiced? And wouldn't that kind of crap be in the article about Karl Marx, not here? --Sysop-TK /MyTalk 01:12, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
I would hope that since communism is an ideology, that the ideology itself would be discussed here, alongside ways in which it has failed, which are many and varied. But not including the hammer and sickle - the most blatant and obvious symbol associated with communism - is verging on ridiculous. --Ĥøĵĭmåçħôńğtalk 01:17, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
This is a joke, right? First, there's no such thing as a Communist state as Hojimachong points out in his proposed paragraph. Second, there have been Marxist Socialist states. Third, it's absurd to think that one is unable to write an article about an ideal. Has the Christian ideal ever been realized? But there are certainly articles about Christianity on the Conservapedia. Finally, it's irresponsible to call things you disagree with 'that kind of crap' since there are approximately 4 billion people on this Earth (a very large majority) that might say the same thing about Christianity. Perhaps it's a good thing we don't live in a global democracy.
Colloquially, "communism" refers to the condition by which in theory, the workers own the means of production. --Ĥøĵĭmåçħôńğtalk 01:23, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
But your initial paragraph is good because it does not fall back on the colloquial usage; that, I believe, is important for an encyclopedia article.

Regarding Hoji's proposed definition, I'd recommend using only the first two sentences. While the third gives important information, it isn't really relevant to the meaning of the word, pe se. Also, substantively, I have some angst about whether the first couple of sentences are properly "Communism," or, rather, "Markism," which aren't necessarily the same thing. Which suggests that there might be a problem with the underlying assumption that there even is a single, unitary definition of the word "Communism." Like most definitions, I think you'll need multiple entries, reflecting the different senses in which the same word is sometimes used. I'd think there should be one entry for "Communism," the ecomomic/political theory, and a separate entry for "Communism," referring the class of governments that generally profess (or professed) to be Communist, with varying degrees of sincerity. Obviously, the core concept of Communism as a theory is the elimination of all private property rights (according to it's proponents, rendering private property rights obsolete, by creating a society in which the supply of all material goods exceeds the demand for them). Equally obviously, no society or state has ever actually done so; however, communist governments are called "Communist" because they at least profess to be working toward that end. Again, that seems sufficient information for a definition; the encyclopedia article should go on to discuss both the fact of these historical failures and the reasons for them--i.e., that the theory doesn't work in practice, for reasons we now understand pretty well. User:QBeam 2:28, 10 Oct. 2007 (EDT)

Communism / China

Something needs to be added stating how completely discredited Communism is, and how today, although called "communism" what is in place in China, really isn't. It is more a revert to the Imperial Bureaucracy. --Sysop-TK /MyTalk 00:58, 25 May 2007 (EDT)

But we don't have agendas....

TK, you are right, and I think Hoji misunderstood my comment several weeks ago about distinguishing between "promise and practice". Communism is much more than "an ideology with an ideal". It is an ideology which justifies the forcible overthrow of existing governments, on the grounds that it will be possible someday to make things much better.

My point is not that we should "love the ideal, hate the practioners". That is a grotesque distortion of the Christian dictum, "hate the sin, love the sinner". Rather, Communism begins with a fake ideal!

Communists claim that they are motivated by an ideal, but there is no evidence that they have ever tried to put this ideal into practice. So they are even worse than Nazis. This explains why Soviets and Red Chinese each murdered 10 times as many people as Hitler did. It's all a lie.

So we need to describe the difference between the ideal Communists say they are striving for and the things they actually do. They are not simply socialists "gone wrong". They started out wrong! --Ed Poor 12:02, 25 May 2007 (EDT)

I'm not much concerned with the body of the article, but rather the lead paragraph, which should adequately state what the theory aims to accomplish. The failures should be documented at Leninism, Stalinism, Maoism, and Trotskyism. And the image is staying. --Ĥøĵĭmåçħôńğtalk 16:42, 25 May 2007 (EDT)

Marxism vs. Communism

Every comparison made between any government that has existed and Communism is false. Communism cannot exist in a state framework. While the Soviets and Chinese governments are run by so-called communist parties, that's akin to calling Richard Cheney a Christian; we can label ourselves any way we want. We have a term in the English (or rather American) language to describe these socialist governments, so why don't we use it? Conservapedia could stand as the lone beacon trying to shine the light on the truth of the differences between Marxism and Communism!

See may latest edit to the article, near the top. Dialectical materialism is the "ideology" or philosophy which is the basis of Marxism. I defy anyone to show me where it talks about how the dictatorship of the proletariat will even "wither away" into a classless society.
No progress or stability can come from struggle. What we need, on the contrary, is voluntary cooperation. --Ed Poor 15:36, 25 May 2007 (EDT)
To Ed: see Engels’s letter to A. Bebel of March 18-28, 1875 (in Marx and Engels, Selected Correspondence, Moscow, 1955, p. 357), wherein Engels says the following:

"As, therefore, the state is only a transitional institution which is used in the struggle, in the revolution, to hold down one’s adversaries by force, it is sheer nonsense to talk of a ‘free people’s state’; so long as the proletariat still needs the state, it does not need it in the interests of freedom but in order to hold down its adversaries, and as soon as it becomes possible to speak of freedom the state as such ceases to exist"

Therefore, it was the belief of Engels that the state would wither away under Communism. In fact it's pretty much common knowledge that this was what Marx and Engels were proposing. Of course, the difference is when this was put into practice. Nonetheless, the point remains that Marx et al did say that the state should wither away after the transitional period of a dictatorship of the people.
Please respond to this, I'd like to hear your insights into this. Blake 12:59, 8 March 2010 (EST)

About communism - is it possible to edit the article anyway?

I don't understand you folks. Came here to check the site out to get an alternative view on things as you say it is about in the NY. But bashing communism like you are is just sad. Illegal to own cars? And no fair wages? The first one seemed like a minor error, something your propaganda has teached you. But the whole idea about communism is fair wages for everyone. And savings? ofcourse you can save the money you earn - even in banks.

Also you invest through taxes. The public as a whole are the onwers and investors of the companies. As a member of the party you suggest what should be built in your county and then everyone vote about it. Just as a big company congress. That communism just as any other ideolgy has been miss-used is true. Horrible people have come to power while the nations citizens didn't bother standing up against them.


You also write in the article about socialism that: "without compensation to the builders of the capital," The problem in these articles in general is not that the points of views are wrong but that the "facts" those views build on are incorrect.

There is compensation to the builders of capital. The builders of capital in this case are the populus(the population) and they recive compensation for their efforts through public ownership of companies (and thus the output of the public stock) like under Titoism or through public spending, free vacations and things like this in the USSR. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Ondskan (talk)

Oh, so we're just supposed to ignore, or deny, democide, and apologize or explain how a mountain of corpses was just an experimental mistake, or misinterpretaion. Wow. RobS 13:43, 20 June 2007 (EDT)
Just skimmed the above and found at least one mistake: what kind of country offers its citizens "free vacations" but labels as "defectors" anyone who tries to emigrate? And punishes successful defectors by taking retribution on any family members left behind.
Sounds like you have a fantasy that idealizes something you know little about. Try researching the history of Russia and Cuba. --Ed Poor Talk 09:02, 12 July 2007 (EDT)


Just back here looking for information on a few American writers and to reply on what has been written here. Yes I belive so. I belive we should learn of what has happend through history and build improve the future with knowledge of what went bad and what went well in the past. Just like the United States napalm bombed Vietnam and had students beaten up during the 20's and 60's the Soviet Union invaded Prague in the same period and put people in the Gulags. Funny enough both countries were built upon revolution and both countries wouldn't exist if people didn't rise up to their masters. But as we know, new masters are formed from the ashes of the old and if power corrupts then the absolute power the leaders of the USA and USSR had back then corrupts absolutely. Thus much of what is written in the article about communism should be removed and instead added into the history of each country that had comited the crimes against humanity that are listed here.

One thing though I find completely ridicilous. Pol Pot was financed by the United States and the United States supported him in his war against Vietnam while it was the communist Vietnam that liberated the people of Cambodia from Pol Pot and his massmurder regime which killed anyone who had an education. If anything, what ever ideology the U.S. had at that time should be blamed and not communism. I'm eager to hear what you have to say on this, t'll then I'll remove Pol Pot. Ondskan 17:53, 21 October 2007 (EDT)

Just like the United States napalm bombed Vietnam and had students beaten up during the 20's and 60's the Soviet Union invaded Prague in the same period and put people in the Gulags.
Interesting contrast, isn't it. Beating up people, etc. is akin to running them down with tanks, taking away all thier civil and human rights, and exterminating them through forced labor in gulags.
much of what is written in the article about communism should be removed...
<RobS is thinking to himself....."no...don't...why is my right hand inching toward the banhammer....maybe this user really does intend to engage in rational, intelligent disucssion...no, be patient one moretime...."> Rob Smith 13:53, 22 October 2007 (EDT)
Pol Pot was financed by the United States
(a) Show cites, (b) even w/cites it still doesn't mean the US paid him to exterminate people (there is such a thing as free will, you know; God gave Cain life, and he was a murderer. Does that mean God is responsible for Cain murdering Abel?). Rob Smith 13:53, 22 October 2007 (EDT)
For the record [1][2] here is Communism in today's world. Rob Smith 14:06, 22 October 2007 (EDT)


Taking away rights? The United States took away the rights of people seen as communists just like the USSR took away rights from people seen as Liberals/Conservatives during McCarter period. They were prosecuted for what they belived in.

Name one. Rob Smith 20:53, 4 November 2007 (EST)

Rights were taken away from people during the 1920's when members/leaders of Worker unions were beaten up by police that was financed by bribes from big companies and they were also fired and it was made hard for these to find new jobs.

How is that akin to being run over with a tank? Rob Smith 20:53, 4 November 2007 (EST)

Today hundreds if not thoulsands of people are being tortued in Guantanamo and other places in the world.

Hundreds of thousands at Guantanamo? Rob Smith 20:53, 4 November 2007 (EST)

At the same time the only valid reason for Invading Iraq left is that Sadam was a tyrant who tortured people to extract information.

Ah yes, the good old days. If Saddam was only around to keep the peace....ah yes, the good ol days.

The people that Sadam tortured were those who were belived to be Kurdish seperatists IE terrorists in his mind.

Right. They had it coming. Anyone who challenges totalitartian dictatorship deserves extermination. At least you are being consistent with many socialist dreams and goals. Rob Smith 20:53, 4 November 2007 (EST)

Are we to blame the constitution, the ideology of the United States and it's people for these mistakes? If that is the way to go then the Republican party has killed far more people through it's wars and sanctions than most realise. http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/iraq/1997/srirq997.htm reports that at least 500 000 children have in only 5 years died of UN sanctions imposed by the US against Iraq.

Hmmmm, Ramsey Clark said one million children died in Iraq during Mr. & Mrs. Clintons's term of office. Rob Smith 20:53, 4 November 2007 (EST)

2,5 millions died in the Vietnam War. etc...etc...

Vietnam was a Republican war?

How come in your oppinion these things don't count as crimes against humanity comited by a conservative ideology/party compared to what you belive Communism is responsible for.

If you question made any sesne, I'd try to answer it. Rob Smith 20:53, 4 November 2007 (EST)

And how can you even dare to draw god and his creation into a comparison with the United States cowardly financing of a murder regime (Pol Pot) to in a desperate attempt stop the winning Vietnam Forces?

When was that? Was during Kennedy/Johnson, or during President Carter, when Carter said human rights was America's number foreign policy. Oh, BTW, when was the Killing Fields.....hmmmmm.....let's see.....during which President's term of office....hmmmm lemme see.....think think think.....1977.....

You should be ashamed of yourself.

Thank you. I am. Why I even bother reading this trash or trying to respond to it frankly makes me disgusted with myself. Rob Smith 20:51, 4 November 2007 (EST)

US embargo on Cuba is not over Communism !

Falsely stated above:"... Cuba, is still kept under economic repression by the USA due to its communist beliefs..."

The embargo on trade with Cuba is to punish Cuba for having expropriated ( with compensation offered but refused )and subsequently nationalized american companies that paid slave wages without benefits to its workers. If you disapprove of Cuban expropriation look up american 'eminent domain' !

One of these companies owned by the Fanjul family now located in Florida operates sugar cane fields in the Dominican Republic using actual slave workers. This is how glorious "opportunity-for-all Capitalism" worked in pre-Castro Cuba. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by RickyTemple (talk)

Excellent point. And the quote in the article looks like commie prop anyway. Please make the change! Thanks! RobS 16:20, 11 July 2007 (EDT)
  • Unfortunately, such talk is typical Liberal deceit. Paying workers the normal prevailing wage in their country is not "slave wages" it is the normal prevailing wage. It is highly illogical to compare wages in a third world country with the wages in the United States, or UK, and then call them "slave wages". U.S. companies paid the going rate. Exactly what they do in the United States. The cost of living in Cuba, pre-1963, and Dominican Republic today, is like 1/100th of that in the U.S. Apples and Oranges comparison, and typical Liberal double-talk. --Sysop-TK /MyTalk 19:46, 17 July 2007 (EDT)
  • Actually, I think your talk is typical "conservative" bias. You have no problem with the Dominican Republic paying such wages to workers, because DR fits your political/economic standard, but yet if Cuba is paying the same wages you would probably call it 'slave wages' because you don't like Cuba or its economic system. For some reason Cuba is held to a higher standard than Dominican Republic because of its economic and political system. Neither DR or Cuba can be compared to the USA or any first-world country. Shola
Shola, if you honestly think living in communist Cuba is so great, fly down there and live for a while. Karajou 19:26, 25 July 2007 (EDT)
  • Hmm, typical selective reading from a "conservative"... I never said Cuba was great... just that you lot are holding it to a higher standard than other Carribean nations, which is unfair. Shola
Has the Dominican Republic promoted, funded, trained and equiped commie insurgent movements to overthrow governments outside its borders? This is the standard. RobS 23:35, 25 July 2007 (EDT)

Actually RobS i am not sure about the Dominican Republic but America sure has! That's right our nation under god has overthrown governments all the time, check out our involvement w/ Guatemala and The United Fruit company (chiquita) u might be surprised. --TomLee 21:06, 4 November 2007 (EST)

Glad you reminded me. I have to do something with Rex Tugwell and United Fruit company soon. Rob Smith 21:43, 4 November 2007 (EST)
  • The most amazing thing about this arguement is, he's got it half right. Cuba is experiencing economic troubles because of trade restrictions in the US, as another editor has pointed out. Now many with the same POV that criticize US trade restrictions on Cuba will turn around and criticize NAFTA, arguing against free trade. As you say, typical double-speak. RobS 20:19, 17 July 2007 (EDT)

Of course the embargo isn't over communism - it's over the Cuban Missile Crisis. If it was just communism - then we wouldn't be trading with Vietnam or China (side note on China: maybe we shouldn't be trading with it ...).--IDuan 23:39, 4 November 2007 (EST)

The Cuban embargo began about 1959, when Castro came to power, siezed prive property, and repudiated foreign debt; the missile blockade was three years later. Let's not confuse a trade embargo between the US & Cuba, with a military action disrupting transfer of weapons between two other sovereign powers. Rob Smith 01:20, 7 November 2007 (EST)
I think you have your sources wrong - to my knowledge (and to apparently the knowledge of other per a google search) - the embargo began in 1962 - however - regardless we can both agree that the current embargo isn't over communism - as otherwise we wouldn't be trading with China.--IDuan 01:41, 7 November 2007 (EST)
We're confusing "embargo," a bilateral trade restriction, with "blockade," a military intervention restricting importation of weapons from one foreign power to another foreign power. While the blockade disrupted Cuba's foreign trade with the Soviet Union, i.e. arms trade, the transfer of the types of weapons violated multilateral agreements.
While the military blockade is nolonger in force (at least to the extent that it was during the Missile Crisis) the bilateral trade embargo between the US & Cuba remains in force. IOW, we are speaking about two distinctly different events & circumstances. Rob Smith 15:16, 7 November 2007 (EST)
Again, my sources seem to indicate that the embargo (meaning no trade) was in '62 - but regardless, same goes as above--IDuan 22:20, 7 November 2007 (EST)
I'm embarassed to say, I'm looking at WP right now. It says, "....the US began to impose gradual trade restrictions on the island. On September 4 1959, Ambassador Bonsal met with Cuban Premier Fidel Castro to express “serious concern at the treatment being given to American private interests in Cuba both agriculture and utilities.”[15]" It links to some good primary sources,[3] but doesn't support the "gradual trade restrictions" statement stemming from 1959. But this is what happened. It was not a total break in 1959, but leverage was used, and evidentally by 1962 either by Congressional action of Executive action, a total embargo was imposed.
Embargos work by degrees; import quotas are embargos, though the same nations still carry on trade and there may not be quotas on different commodities. A total break in relations usually results in a total break in legal trade between nations. The "gradual" reference is called applying "leverage." Rob Smith 22:37, 7 November 2007 (EST)
Bottomline: Castro wanted to play the big hero and repudiated the foreign debt, using Lenin as his model. Leftists cheered, "Hoorah! for the underdog, standing up to the big bully!" Only it was the Cuban people who now suffered, cause leftist & commie idiots do not understand people need each other, that is what trade is, everybody profits, everybody benefits, its a win-win situation.
Now Castro wants to play the victim, "the big bad United States won't trade with me" and the people of Cuba eat rats. The problem is, he's too proud to admit he screwed up, big time. And libs & commies share the moral responsibiltiy for the Cuban people's sufferring. Just you wait and see, when he's dead, his name is dirt, the Cuban people will scream "Never Again!" Rob Smith 22:47, 7 November 2007 (EST)
I agree with you - however, the gradual start of the embargo, in my mind at least - was not the real begging - as a lot was still allowed, just to clarify--IDuan 22:54, 7 November 2007 (EST)
That's right. It wasn't an immediate break, so the idea the US was hard-nosed & inflexible simply isnt't true. The break came over a protracted period because of Castro's inflexibility, and has remained so for the same reasons. Rob Smith 21:17, 8 November 2007 (EST)

Get your facts straight!

When I began reading this article I thought it was a parody, upon further examination I (humorously)found that this page claims to be fact. Most of this is opinion with small bits of fact that are obviously used to support your opinion, while ignoring other facts that are extremely important in understanding what Communism is. What I found the most ridiculous, however, was that "Nazism" was under the "see also" column. Communism just happens to the polar opposite of Nazism, because Communism is on the far left of the political spectrum, while Nazism is on the far right. This obviously shows, that once again, this is purely bias, despite the claim that you are less biased than wikipedia. Its almost funny that you can claim this as fact, but I suppose its actually a bit sad, because I'm sure some idiot believes it to be as factual as you can get. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by ThePantsMobile (talk)

Wow. You sound like an extreme POV pusher. RobS 23:13, 29 July 2007 (EDT)
To ThePantsMobile: you're not quite correct there actually. It's too simple to say Communism and Nazism are polar opposites. In fact, they have lots of things in common - one-party states, a monopoly of the means of communication, extensive surveillance, subjugation of the individual, etc. Economically speaking, they are polar opposites. However, socially speaking they are very similar. A straight line with Communism at one end and Nazism at the other isn't very accurate, perhaps a horseshoe with them at either end would be better.
To RobS: True, he is POV, but isn't that the point of Conservapedia? To be POV (though of course promoting a conservative viewpoint)? Blake 13:06, 8 March 2010 (EST)

Unbelievably Hypocritical

I am completely dumbstruck by this article. It reeks of so much bias that I thought I must have been looking at Unclyclopedia - a parody site, like someone else said. If Conservapedia wishes to claim a higher standard than Wikipedia, such atrocities as this need to be fixed as soon as possible. I would help myself, but I think this is practically at the point where the entire thing needs to be done over. And yes, this article is an atrocity. Despite the horrible crimes against humanity committed by governments claiming to be communist, communism is only an idea, and really, true communism has never existed on a large scale. In it's purest form of material equality, it has only lasted in situations like with Jesus and his disciples.

I would plead with the creator of this article to start from scratch and define communism only as an idea and ideal. Please go ahead and describe to great extent how this concept has been abused and has gone wrong, but just set yourself straight with this issue.

-Xenophon

On one level I'd be inclined to agree with you. The Political spectrum is only an idea. Conservativism is only an idea. "Right-wing" is only an idea. The atrocities conservatives and "right-wingers" have suffered however, at the hands of Communists, is having ideas ascribed to them that they do not hold.
So, what we indeed are discussing is doctrine. Communist doctrine, the historical record not proves (a) is a platform for deceit, and (b) has both advocated and practiced democide. Rob Smith 12:26, 3 August 2007 (EDT)

P.S. My last account got banned or something for absolutely no reason, other than perhaps what my username was, so do I need to try to be more conservative to continue to contribute to this site?

And what account was that? Karajou 09:40, 1 August 2007 (EDT)
This is one of the standard justifications for Communism: the pretense that it is "only an idea", as if that excuses all the damage it has done. Communism includes an ideology and a plan for action. Carrying out the plan caused untold harm. Pretending that this harm is unrelated to the plan or the ideology is unbelievably foolish at best, and if done intentionally is inexcusably wicked. --Ed Poor Talk 13:40, 30 August 2007 (EDT)

Category

I don't think that "liberal falsehoods" is an appropriate category for this article. We can argue about whether communism is a left wing or right wing ideology, but the simple matter of fact is that the word "liberal" isn't even stated in the article, and the ideology is not currently being proposed by liberals. Could a sysop please remove this category, and possibly add an Economics category to complement the Politics one that is on there? ΨtrykeЯ eh?> 12:41, 3 August 2007 (EDT)

No, economics is not the proper category for communism anymore than anthropology is the proper category for national socialism. Rob Smith 12:51, 3 August 2007 (EDT)

This article is a load of crap

A load of crap. Total, total crap. It sounds like the people who made this article have been hiding out under a rock since the Red Scare and have just now reentered modern society. In addition, it's full of spelling and grammatical errors. "Persons born in Communist countries have no citizenships rights"? What the hell is that drivel? Clean it up. NOW. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Nickalexwb (talk)

Rasch da, rasch!
Dann rührt euch von hin,
das du mir schafft!
Fort in die Schacht!
Weh euch, find ich euch faul!
Auf dein Fersen folge ich euch nach!—The preceding unsigned comment was added by RobS (talk)
Actually to some extent I agree - I mean communism is an economic theory - economic theories can't enslave or kill.--Iduan 21:05, 21 August 2007 (EDT)
Really? Let's figure 100,000,000 x averge weight of 130 pounds = 130,000,000,000 lbs. divide by 2000 = 65,000,000 tons of dead, rotting stinking flesh. You think communist scumm today are going to hide that? Rob Smith 21:14, 21 August 2007 (EDT)
Before we think about math let's just start thinking about logic. Communism is an economic theory. Saying it kills people is like saying intelligent design kills people.--Iduan 21:24, 21 August 2007 (EDT)
bla bla bla bla Rob Smith 21:32, 21 August 2007 (EDT)

Ahh another intellectual jewel from the famous RobSmith--TomLee 21:02, 4 November 2007 (EST) Why don't we change the first sentence to something more along the lines of

"Communism is Karl Marx's economic theory that emphasizes the non-existence of personal property and thus a classless system. History has shown disasterous results when communism has been instituted, as under it the lives of more than 100 million have been lost. Today 1/5 of the world's population are under communist rule - with the rest of the world being under socialism or capitalism." --Iduan 21:41, 21 August 2007 (EDT)

What would be the purpose of giving this murderous doctrine any sort of intellectual credibility? Rob Smith 21:44, 21 August 2007 (EDT)
Logic and accuracy. It's not giving the doctrine intellectual credibility - it's giving the article intelligence.--Iduan 21:45, 21 August 2007 (EDT)
It is not an economic theory. It is a murderous doctrine which has only brought misery, sufferring, and death (except to some of its advocates & apologists). Rob Smith
Rob - it's not a murderous doctrine - that doesn't even make sense. I agree with you that it has brought misery, thus the second sentence, but to call it something it's not is over the top--Iduan 21:50, 21 August 2007 (EDT)
I realize dead people don't talk, so you are saying the Memorial to the Victims of Communism is just a scam and tourist attraction? Rob Smith 22:17, 21 August 2007 (EDT)
RobS again - I'm not saying that when communism is the system of government deaths don't occur - and you would realize that if you read my second sentence. Please stop trying to twist my words and also try to remain civil (comments like "bla bla bla" aren't necessary)--Iduan 22:24, 21 August 2007 (EDT)

Iduan, if you want to debate this, please suggest a page to add to our Debate topics. This is going nowhere; and it's not helping to make the article better. --Ed Poor Talk 13:42, 30 August 2007 (EDT)

I don't post at debate because it's not a debate - it's about the article's first sentence. No one disputes that communism is a theory by Karl Marx.--Iduan 23:13, 30 August 2007 (EDT)

Section Break

  • Perhaps, somewhere in the first or second paragraph, it would be wise for us to have a text-book explanation of exactly what Communism is. I am not talking about practice, or what it became. Just a simple explanation of what Marx said it was. Then we can, and have shown what a liar/dreamer/schemer he was. --şŷŝôρ-₮KṢρёаќǃ 23:25, 21 August 2007 (EDT)
I would say that the mix is there in the paragraph I provided. I mean both sentences currently in the opening paragraph are included in the paragraph I provided - but I also say what communism is, text book wise.--Iduan 23:27, 21 August 2007 (EDT)

Communism is Karl Marx's economic theory that emphasizes the non-existence of personal property and thus a classless system. History has shown disastrous results when communism has been instituted, as under it the lives of more than 100 million have been lost. Today 1/5 of the world's population are under communist rule - with the rest of the world being under socialism or capitalism.

This block of text confuses two different meanings of communism:
  1. The ideal stage of economy when (as Marx theorized) socialism "withered away"; and,
  2. The actual system of totalitarian government which overthrows Capitalism and institutes Socialism by force. --Ed Poor Talk 13:46, 30 August 2007 (EDT)
Communism has one meaning - there is not a second definition. Communism is the theory by Karl Marx, but in practice - it has been disastrous - leading to more than 100 million deaths. The paragraph states that.--Iduan 23:13, 30 August 2007 (EDT)

I wonder, by RobS line of thinking, should the article entitled "Guns" lead off with the number of people killed by guns? Funnily, I didn't come across that statistic anywhere in the article, despite the fact that it is FAR greater than those killed by communists. Ideologies, like guns, do not kill people. Evil people kill people. If this site has a reasonably educated base, you ought to be able to present the facts in an ENCYCLOPEDIC fashion without having to worry that the article is converting people to communism. Vinceipierce 21:34, 28 August 2007 (EDT)

While your guns argument is a good point in the changing of this article's intro - you've dragged it out excessively - please attempt to present your comments in a calm fashion.--Iduan 22:59, 28 August 2007 (EDT)

RobS - while Vinceipierce did it in a bad fashion - he is the fourth editor to say the intro needs changing. I again show you the proposed paragraph which, again, states all the information of the current paragraph but provides what communism is.--Iduan 23:05, 28 August 2007 (EDT)

Communism is Karl Marx's economic theory that emphasizes the non-existence of personal property and thus a classless system. History has shown disasterous results when communism has been instituted, as under it the lives of more than 100 million have been lost. Today 1/5 of the world's population are under communist rule - with the rest of the world being under socialism or capitalism.

Vinceipierce said,
Evil people kill people

Now we're getting closer to the point. Rob Smith 11:07, 29 August 2007 (EDT)

Exactly Robs - however communism is not a person. Nor is it a device, or any solid thing. It is an idea - and you're refusal to accept that is hurting this article. Everyone here except you has said the intro needs to be changed.--Iduan 14:24, 29 August 2007 (EDT)
Our page on National Socialism does not begin, "Nazism was a social theory...", and it will not read as such either. It states the record. Rob Smith 14:27, 29 August 2007 (EDT)

Now you're really reaching - it doesn't say "Nazism killed" this many people either. It says "Nazis is an acronym for the National Socialist German Workers' Party (German: Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei)." That's not "record" - that's fact. Just as the proposed intro is.--Iduan 14:30, 29 August 2007 (EDT)

Communism is Karl Marx's economic theory that emphasizes the non-existence of personal property and thus a classless system. History has shown disasterous results when communism has been instituted, as under it the lives of more than 100 million have been lost. Today 1/5 of the world's population are under communist rule - with the rest of the world being under socialism or capitalism

I unprotected Nazism, why don't you go fix it. Rob Smith 14:34, 29 August 2007 (EDT)


This analysis is half true, but it uses Communist & Socialists idioms to impose a communist & socialist view of the world. Using the statement, "the rest of the world being under socialism or capitalism", is misleading because Communism itself is capitalist. It could not function otherwise. The question resolves around ownership rights (or "title", to use the legal term). In the communist/socialist/marxist and somtimes "liberal" scheme, a worker does not own title to his labor, and communist party bosses, such as still exist in China, Cuba, and North Korea, own both the "means of production", and the title to the workers labor. So I will vigorously protest using marxist terminolgy in any definitive scheme. Rob Smith 14:58, 30 August 2007 (EDT)

And an Administrative note: cutting and pasting redundant arguments, such as User:Iduan does above to make redundant points, will be regarded as trolling, a blockable offense. Rob Smith 15:08, 30 August 2007 (EDT)



I wasn't making a point on nazism - you were. You keep trying to change the subject or be incomprehensible in your effort to avoid the fact that the intro needs to be changed - and when you aren't those you're making ridiculous attempts to justify the intro- as you did with Nazism. Everyone has agreed that the intro needs to be changed - you're the lone wolf that disagrees. TK said the intro should be changed, I have said it, Nickalexwb said it and Vinceipierce also said it. You're completely outnumbered.--Iduan 14:45, 29 August 2007 (EDT)

It would be good somewhere in the Guns article to say how many people were killed by them. However, a gun is neutral; it can be used for aggression or for self-defense. Guns can save lives (by preventing attack). We need an article explaining John Lott's analysis of this in More Guns, Less Crime, but surely you are aware that disarming the citizenry allows a dictatorship to consolidate its power and commit mass murder - precisely what Stalin and Mao did.
We should mention the number of civilians murdered by followers of Nazism: it is around 11 million; see Holocaust. --Ed Poor Talk 13:51, 30 August 2007 (EDT)

RobS you have yet to actually respond to much of anything. RobS you have yet to actually respond to much of anything. You started out with German, then with the "bla bla bla" thing - and then with a math equation and response that actually wasn't responding to anything - it was more of a comment, and then you did say that communism shouldn't be "intellectual credibility" - and then you had you're whole Nazi thing ... which was off base to say the least. Is there anything you actually disagree with in the paragraph?--Iduan 23:13, 30 August 2007 (EDT)

We do no one a service referring to communism as some sort of theory, intellectual, social, or economic doctrine. Communism is the name upon which 10s of millions of lives have been destroyed. Rob Smith 23:19, 30 August 2007 (EDT)
Communism was a criminal enterprise from its inception which destroyed the lives of scores of millions of innocent people. The manner in which the Soviet Union collapsed, despite the fact that it held diplomatic recognition from the United States, Great Britain, and held seats in the UN, demonstrated the Communist party never held legitimate power in the Soviet Union.
We do not allow wide sections of Nazi related content to be used to put forward the theories of Adolf Hitler, Rudolf Hess, Josef Goebbels, and Julies Striecher, expounding how theories expressed in Mien Kampf were misunderstood or misinterpreted, or what they really mean.
Now, if you persist in communist apologetics, attempting to characterize it as anything other than the misery and death it has wrought upon the human race, and continue this trolling with this extremist point of view, you are looking at a permaban. Rob Smith 23:43, 30 August 2007 (EDT)
You seem to be confusing communist apologetics and reality. There's actually a difference. In one the paragraph would start out "Communism is the best thing in the world - capitalism, its rival, sucks". In the other, my paragraph - which states how many people communism killed and also that its an economic doctrine - and your accusation of trolling is merely you being a troll - for even TK said we should say what communism actually is in the intro - unless your calling TK a troll too. We do people a service because we're actually giving them information. From this essay I can see someone saying "Communism killed 100 million people." "But do you know what communism is?" "It killed 100 million people" "But what is it" "It's a monster duh". I mean in the whole article we don't really even say who created it - Marx (we do say that Marx created Marxism - but this was the first form of communism, and that's not noted).--Iduan 10:21, 31 August 2007 (EDT)

Exaggeration in the Introduction

Cut:

It does not allow for savings and investment, the ownership of private property, such as homes or cars, or even fair payment of wages and labor. Persons born in Communist countries have no citizenships rights.

This is a mixture of truth and fiction:

  • savings - false: no one makes you spend all your money
  • investment - true: you can't buy stock in a company, or create a partnership in a privately owned business like a factory
  • homes - uncertain: but apartment buildings are only state-owned
  • cars - false: Soviet citizens could own cars
  • wages - unclear: depends on what "fair" means; certainly the idea of paying everyone the same, regardless of productivity can be demoralizing; see incentive pay
  • citizenship rights - misleading: Communist countries grant citizenship rights

In general, nothing should be in the intro unless it refers to something explained in greater depth later on in the article. --Ed Poor Talk 13:35, 30 August 2007 (EDT)

All of this can be supported by evidence; particularly citizenship rights, which are only granted to party members. And concepts such as "wages", and "money", are bourgeois. Rob Smith 14:45, 30 August 2007 (EDT)
You seem to be confusing communism and socialism, among other things. No Communist regime, if I recall correctly, has ever claimed that it had implemented communism (although the Chinese Communist Party came close to doing so during the Great Leap Forward era and the creation of People's Communes). Rather, they claimed to be in a socialist phase of development which precedes communism. No Soviet-type communist government abolished wages or money.

It is also important to have a description and discussion of communist ideologies. Just to go 'commies - evil' over and over again is counter-productive, and does the conservative cause no good whatsoever. "Know thine enemy" involves having an understanding of him/her; encouraging ignorance of your enemy is to aid him/her.

Pachyderm 10:41, 31 August 2007 (EDT)

Re-write Opening Sentence

"In less than the past 100 years, Communism has claimed more than 100 million lives. Today, it continues to enslave one-fifth of the world's people."

That may be true, but shouldn't the introductory sentence actually tell us something? Shouldn't it say who created the concepts of Communism? Shouldn't it at least mention Marx? --Goldstein 23:29, 1 September 2007 (EDT)

see two sections above- so far 5 people (including you) say that.--Iduan 23:59, 1 September 2007 (EDT)
Your buddy above just got an infinite block as denier of Communist genocide. Care to push your luck some more, too? Rob Smith 15:19, 2 September 2007 (EDT)
Do you typically threaten people when every else disagrees with you? Again, TK, that guy, and four other people above including myself have said the intro needs to be changed.--Iduan 16:13, 2 September 2007 (EDT)
And frankly rob - aside from that comment being way out of line - I'm starting to question your ability to read. I say in the paragraph that communism killed 100 million. Why don't you actually start making legitimate points -unless you want to bring up random subjects like Nazism again.--Iduan 16:15, 2 September 2007 (EDT)
  • Take some time and reflect on if you really want to be here. Leave the biting personal remarks out, as well as stating what others, including me, think. --şŷŝôρ-₮KṢρёаќǃ 16:21, 2 September 2007 (EDT)

I'd just like to point out that Marx has been misquoted. It's a small, frequent mistake, but it was actually "The Opiate of the people", not "the Opium of the people." —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Illuminated (talk)

The need to condemn communist crimes and hypocrisy

In something less than 90years, communist regimes and left wing guerrilas eliminated more than 100 million people combined, not to mention they deprived the right to live with dignity to many more, maybe in the hundrends of millions.

My point is that since communism has killed more people than nazism, why should we not condemn their crimes, and leave aside all deniers and apologists.

Now, concerning this page, i suggest we include the common features of all communist regimes such as the implementation of the same disastrous agricultural and collectivization policy which resulted in millions of deads. First USSR forced mass collectivization under a group of pseudo-scientists (Lysenko etc) which occured simultaneously with severe anti-ukraine policies and violent purges against the intelligensia and the church. PRC, DPRK and "Democratic Campuchea" adopted and further incorporated "marxist" ideas. Communist world followed a specific pattern, which was firstly introduced by Lenin and Stalin.

What is more, i beleive that we should also refer to dictatorship-nostalgic communist parties and other controversial issues so that their example acts as a deterrent. Such groups include left wing groups in both EU and US. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by User:Gmoros (talk)

Have at it (it's unlocked). Rob Smith 12:08, 6 September 2007 (EDT)

we need to have a definition of communism start the article.

I am no fan of communism but we need to have a definition of communism start the article. Right now the article starts off poor. Conservative 21:54, 7 September 2007 (EDT)

I'd object to trying to give it any sort of scholarly basis whatsoever, trying to label it as "an economic theory', or a "social theory". Even referring to as a "social system" or "economic system' is problematic, in that it gives it some sort of legitimacy. "Cult" is the best I can come up with, but I'm open to suggestions. Rob Smith 22:07, 7 September 2007 (EDT)
Legitimacy? Communism has legitimacy just as Nazism use to have legitimacy. I mean, the second most powerful country in the world employs it (well, says it does). I mean it's not like this is just some wacky idea that came out of teletubbies. I agree with conservative - and I would stand by the introduction i stated above.--Iduan 22:56, 7 September 2007 (EDT)
The point you make is correct, "legitimacy" in the past tense. The fact that nearly one quarter of the planet is enslaved in no way should be passed off by Conservapedia as legitimate. This is precisely the point. Rob Smith 11:37, 8 September 2007 (EDT)
Again - that doesn't make any sense. That's like saying that terms like "genocide" shouldn't have any legitimacy - sure there might be some going on, but that doesn't mean we should recognize them and give them "legitimacy".--Iduan 13:43, 8 September 2007 (EDT)

<--

Our definition intertwines communism with genocide; the record of the CCP certainly is genocidal. The Epoch Times as recently as 2004 has said this (some excerpts, I'd recommend reading all 9 Commenrtaries):

"Let’s take a close look at...what was imposed on China, after over 160 years, nearly 100 million unnatural deaths, and the destruction of nearly all Chinese traditional culture and civilization."
"Communist regimes clearly represent a huge step backward in human civilization. Unfortunately, the Communist Party has been seen as progressive by those who believe that violence is an essential
"The Communist Party completely overthrows the universal standards for human nature, and builds itself on principles that oppose human nature."
"training starts in preschools and kindergartens, where party-sanctioned answers to questions are rewarded, answers that do not comply with common sense or a child’s human nature. Students receive political education when they attend primary school, middle school and all the way to college, and they learn to follow party-sanctioned standard answers"
"According to modern political science, power comes from three main sources: force, wealth, and knowledge. The Communist Party has never hesitated to use monopoly control and force to rob people of their property. More importantly, it has deprived people of their freedoms of speech and of the press. It has raped people’s spirit and will in order to maintain its absolute control of power. From this aspect, the CCP’s evil possession controls society so tightly that it can hardly be compared to any other regime in the world.

On What the Communist Party Is Rob Smith 14:14, 8 September 2007 (EDT)

There are small groups of people who live in communes which internally follow communism. While these people are indeed participating in the larger capitalist economy, the ideal and economic philosophy that they participate in is communism. As the group is purely voluntary there is no enslavement, nor is there any genocide. While implentations of communism elsewhere may have poor records on human rights and atrocities, this should not factor into the underlying economic philosophy. --Rutm 14:25, 8 September 2007 (EDT)
"One of the theories the communists employ is social Darwinism. The Communist Party applies Darwin’s inter-species competition to human relationships and human history, maintaining that class struggle is the only driving force for societal development. Struggle, therefore, became the primary “belief” of the Communist party, a tool in gaining and maintaining political control. "
"Non-communist societies generally consider humanity’s dual nature of good and evil and they rely on fixed social contracts to maintain a balance in society. In communist societies, however, the very concept of human nature is denied, and neither good nor evil is acknowledged. Eliminating the concepts of good and evil, according to Marx, serves to completely overthrow the superstructure of the old society."
"placed above human nature and feelings is the Party nature, which, according to the requirements of the Communist Party, transcends humanity. Thus, humanity becomes relative and changeable, while Party nature becomes absolute, beyond any doubt or challenge. Rob Smith 14:36, 8 September 2007 (EDT)

RobS - everyone knows that it's a bad theory - but obviously there are some that believe it is a good theory - in large part proven by it's application to past (USSR) and present (China) world powers. You act as though we want the article to have a communist-slant, but no one does - we just want the article to say the truth rather than hide it. Not saying what communism is - is censorship - sure it'd be good-intentioned censorship - but still censorship nonetheless, and it's the exact same censorship that communism uses.--Iduan 00:00, 9 September 2007 (EDT)

Those quotes are indeed examples of The Communist Party and its application of communism. However, The Communist Party is an implementation of communism and is no more communism than democracy is the Democratic Party. The philosophy and the political implementation are separate things and should be written as such. --Rutm 00:13, 9 September 2007 (EDT) In particular, I would like to ask the question is a self sufficient kibbutz as part of a voluntary commune implementing communism (the philosophical ideal of "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need") and is this as inherently evil as it is made out to be in the above quotes? --Rutm 00:56, 9 September 2007 (EDT)

What is the role of the opiate of the masses in a Kibbutz? Rob Smith 14:40, 9 September 2007 (EDT)

65- 100 million people killed

I posted the following: "In less than the past 100 years, Communism has claimed between 65 million and 100 million lives.[4][5][6][7] I think the starvation part is the most controversial. I don't pretend to be an expert but it seems to me as if the communists probably did not keep good records on their attrocities and incompetence. Why would you want to keep good records of such a thing? I would think you would want to sweep it under the rug if anything. I am open to any reasonable suggestions on why I my revision to the article improved on the article or detracted from the article. Conservative 15:56, 8 September 2007 (EDT)

R.J. Rummel, who coined the term "democide", is the expert we should consult. [8] Rummel puts the figure at roughly 110 million [9]. We can test Rummel's figures and methodology with our own entry Communist Genocide, Democide and Mass Homicide. Notice, for example this citation, [10] which on Operation Keelhaul, the author refers to as the "Allied holocaust," says this :
"Roosevelt and Churchill would force the Russian anticommunists into Stalin's hands. The communists would take over from there and do the actual killing. ...How many were turned over to the Russians by American and British forces? Two million individuals . Yes, two million Russian people sent back to the communists where they were either immediately executed or sent to die in the Gulag."
I am not certain if these 2 million are included in Rummel's figures, and it certainly needs investigation. This is a forgotten democide, unreported in the West, and this figure of two million needs to be verified. Rob Smith 16:55, 8 September 2007 (EDT)
I don't think we should be overly reliant on one expert but at the same time my figure of 65 million is merely based on what two scholars stated (65 -93 million).[11] I suspect we could do better in respect to the figures given, however, I do think that we should give a range. Ideally we would cite what the liberal scholars ranges are and then state if and why they are errant. At this point, I cannot say what the likelihood the liberal scholars are errant because I am not well informed on this issue. Conservative 14:54, 9 September 2007 (EDT)

Employment

Conservative, you should back away from your statement there isn't private employment in China. It is unsupportable. And to argue that officially there isn't is a logical fallacy and typical of people using so-called "facts" to support the POV they wish an article to take. One doesn't need that kind of intellectual dishonesty to show how horrible Communism is, or what an economic sham it is in practice. The fact is, there is private employment in China, and people do employ others, therefore all statements to the contrary are false. --şŷŝôρ-₮KṢρёаќǃ 16:32, 8 September 2007 (EDT)

So called "Communist Regimes" were not communist

Communism, as defined by Marx, did not have a state. The very fact that the USSR and China have/did have strong dictatorships makes them not-communist. These atrocities commited by "communists", were in fact committed by people claiming to be communists. If I claimed to be a Christian and went and killed a million people, would that make Christianity evil? No, it wouldn't.--DirtyCommie 08:26, 10 September 2007 (EDT)

We had this same discussion at Talk:Socialism, were Socialists claimed the Union of Soviet Socialists Republics were not Socialists, they were Communists. Ok, so let's take you at your word; Stalin, the USSR, the CCP, the British Labour Party, et al are not Communist. They are Socialist.
Gotta love discussing this garbage with Commies, Socialists, Libs, Progressives, Pinkos, Reds, Lefists, Radicals, etc.; never was the Word of God spoken more truthful and clearly :
henceforth be no more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive [12]
Rob Smith 13:05, 10 September 2007 (EDT)
Ok, so let's take you at your word; Stalin, the USSR, the CCP, the British Labour Party, et al are not Communist. They are Socialist. You are confusing two stages of how 'scientific' Marxism saw society as developing. Stalin, the CCP, the CPSU aspired towards fully-fledged communism, but recognised that they were at present in the socialist phase of revolution. they were communists, but did not claim that the states they ruled were communist. Hence the Union of Soviet SOCIALIST Republics. True communism, according to their belief, would not come about until the dictatorship of the proletariat had vanquished counterrevolutionary bourgeois tendencies. Mao refined this view to see the Party itself becoming spiritually bourgeois and foresaw repeated revolutions of the people against an embourgeoisified party - of which the Cultural Revolution was the first.

To lump the British Labour Party in with the others is plain silly.Pachyderm 14:49, 10 September 2007 (EDT)

I've confused nothing. The Epoch Times reports,
"The Communist Party’s evolving principles have largely contradicted one another. From the idea of a global integration transcending the nation-state to today’s extreme nationalism, from eliminating all private ownership and all exploitative classes to today’s notion of promoting capitalists to join the party, yesterday’s principles have become reversed in today’s politics, with further change expected tomorrow. No matter how often the CCP changes its principles, the goal remains clear: gaining and maintaining power, and sustaining absolute control of the society."
Again, blown about with "every wind of doctrine."
I'm firmly grounded, rooted, and established, unlike all the various ever-changing socialist doctrines, which includes National Socialism. We do not need graphics deliniations as to what pornography is to be able to explain it to our readers; all we need to do is cite the record of what it has done to society. Communism is little different. Rob Smith 20:16, 10 September 2007 (EDT)

"...all we need to do is cite the record of what it has done to society. Communism is little different."

You are confusing the notions of 'a communist state' and 'a state run by communists'. The two are not neccessarily synonymous, and the former has never existed in terms of Marxist-Leninist theory. Pachyderm 09:22, 11 September 2007 (EDT)
Who gives a rip. This is getting close to trolling now. Everyone has been warned several times. Rob Smith 10:58, 11 September 2007 (EDT)
Everyone has been warned several times.When and by whom? I thought this was a mature debate (until I read 'who gives a rip', that is). Pachyderm 11:25, 11 September 2007 (EDT)

Does this article need a section discussing the theoretical advantages of private property?

Of course, the problem with theoretical economics is that it can wander far from the real world. Hense, the invention of experimental economics was one of the sharpest of blows to communism/socialism as political movements. On the other hand, merely observing that communism and socialism have a bad historical track record isn't really a satisfying treatment of the question. If it's true that free markets are systematically more efficient (and I think it is), then it should be possible to offer a theoretical defense of them more satisfying than Churchill's formula regarding democracy.

Alternatively, perhaps what is needed is a good article on private property and free market microeconomic theory, which can be linked.

Off the top of my head, the key points that ought to be addressed are: (1) the improved efficiency that comes from the reduction in rent seeking when assets are privately owned; (2) the improved efficiency that results from the internalization of externalities that results when assets are privately owned; and (3) the tremendous advantage in computational power of distributed decisionmaking systems over central processing systems, as specifically applied to to the economic decisionmaking systems of a democratic free market, on the one hand, and the central planning body in a command economy, on the other.

Does anyone have any thoughts on what would be the most helpful approach?

Interesting question; sort of like, "Which would you prefer, shooting or hanging?" Given a choice, I'd take shooting, I suppose. Rob Smith 17:59, 4 October 2007 (EDT)
What a peculiar response. Do you mean to suggest that an article discussing the shortcomings of Communism should not bother to consider its theoretical shortcomings, or are you simply suggesting that it doesn't have any?
I'm merely suggesting your longwinded apologies like this, "a society in which the supply of all material goods exceeds the demand for them...no society or state has ever actually done so" does not get away from the fact that this perverted, sick, warped, ideology is responsible for the systematic murder of 135,000,000 human beings in recent memory. Rob Smith 15:11, 10 October 2007 (EDT)
Nor is it supposed to "get away" from that fact. It's simply another aspect of Communism that deserves to be addressed. Personally, I think it's far more important to do so, because it has more relevance to the economic policy debate today in our country. "We should not enact Communist policies because past Communists were evil people" is not really a rational argument. "We should not enact Communist policies because they are predicated on false assumptions, and Communist economic systems are inherently less capable of meeting the material needs and desires of the public" is a rational argument.
  • (a) not really a rational argument
  • (b) confusing "communism" with "communists"
Comment: this is commie trolling. I feel the banhammer calling my right hand....Rob Smith 15:10, 11 October 2007 (EDT)

(re-indent) I'm not sure what "commie trolling" means, but if the suggestion is that I'm acting as an apologist for communism, then I'm shocked at the suggestion. I'm not sure how much more clearly I can say that the problem, as I see it, is that the article fails to address the most fundamental failure of Communism--namely, that the underlying theory is simply wrong. I understand that some apologists have tried to preserve the reputation of communism-the-theory by distinguishing it from the putative communism actually implemented, but we should not draw the fallacious conclusion that everyone who points out this distinction is a communist apologist. Personally, I think it's important to understand why it is that self-described communist regimes did not, in fact, implement "real" communism precisely because it illustrates the futility of attempting to implement communist policies: Even regimes whole-heartedly committed to bringing about a communist utopia could not do so! They had to settle for various half-measures they hoped would bring about the communist utopia incrementally (such as socialism, in which, supposedly, resources are distributed "from each, according to his work, to each according to his need"). Those half measures failed, and the international revolution of the proletariat never materialized. In the end, the communist block lost the Cold War because, contrary to the claims of communist theorists, in practice, communist countries simply could not keep up with the material wealth produced by private property. That would have been true even if communist countries had been run by an unbroken chain of saints. User:QBeam 4:46 EDT, 11 Oct. 2007

So "real" communism, or communism in practice (I don't see the difference) does not belong on the ash heap of history? If not, why are we having this discussion? Rob Smith 17:05, 11 October 2007 (EDT)
No, I'd say exactly the opposite. Both "real" communism and the various attempts to implement it very much belong on the ash heap of history, because the theory is just plain wrong. Because the theory is wrong, no effort to implement it can ever work. Consider an analogy to perpetual motion machines. At some point, it makes sense to become suspicious of someone's claim to have made one, purely from the fact that everyone who's ever claimed to make one has turned out to be wrong. However, by itself, no matter how many frauds and failures you see, that can never prove that no one will ever figure out how to make one. (Maybe it's just like breaking the sound barrier--hard, but possible.) But once you understand the underlying theoretical problem with them--they violate the Law of Conservation of Energy--then you can stop saying they're "probably" a fool's errand, and say "We know they're a fool's errand." My point is that there is an underlying theory that explains why private property produces wealth, and why the absence of private property rights produces shorages and misery. We don't have to settle for "communism is probably wrong"--it can be demonstrated to be wrong from first principles. Therefore, any comprehensive article discussing communism should do so, in my opinion. User:QBeam
P.S. The distinction between "real" communism and "communism-in-practice," for want of a better term, is straitforward. "Real" communism refers to to communist ideology, or theory. "Real" is perhaps an inapt term for something characterized by its existence only in some people's minds. But why quibble? "Communism-in-practice," on the other hand, is meant to refer to the systems that actually existed behind the Iron Curtain. They differ from one another profoundly. In "real" communism, there is no private property of any kind--it has been made obsolete, because, as a result of making the means of production publicly held, productivity has been increased to the point where the supply of everything exceeds the demand. In a world where everything you might want is free (even in the strict economic sense), you don't need private property. Obviously, no communist regime ever tried to completely abolish private property, though they took a variety of steps in that direction. Even more obviously, no communist country ever managed to improve its productively beyond that of free market economies in which private property rights are respected. The distinctions between "real" communism and communism-as-actually-practiced go on, but these are, in my opinion, the most crucial distinctions. User:QBeam
So we agree private property is a fundemental human right. This leaves aside the question that Communism, in good faith, ever sought to abolish this fundemental human right for some greater good. It rather seems to be more of the spiritual wickedness in high places we wrestle against, i.e. the envy and hate that possessed Cain to murder his brother. In the final analysis, the gospel of Communism did not then, nor does it now, nor many of its subsidiary offshoots and progeny, amount to anything more. Rob Smith 18:07, 11 October 2007 (EDT)
I'd think any real conservative would be tired of attempts by liberals to shut down rational objections to their cause-du-jour by labeling them "human rights," so I'll presume that wasn't your intent. Private property is a valuable instrumental right, because it produces good results (namely greater material prosperity and social harmony), but that doesn't mean it is an absolute or moral right. It is at least theoretically possible to organize a society without the concept of private property that provides even better results. So far, we've yet to discover one, though Communism purports to be one. A thorough, rational response to Communism should specifally address the mechanisms by which private property works to improve prosperity and harmony, because the loss of those mechanisms is part of the opportunity costs of any Communist system, however sincere or well-meaning its organizers and rulers. (Furthermore, I think it helps to explain why persistent efforts to implement Communism tend to result in mass murder and misery. Once it becomes apparent that human nature, contrary to Communist prophesies, does not naturally bring about a Communist utopia, they begin to resort to attempts to alter human nature to make it compatible to their Communist vision, as with Stalin's deliberate starvation of Ukrainian farmers to implement collective farming.) Which brings me back to my original point: does it make more sense for them to be addressed in section on private property, or in a separate article on private property to which this one can refer?—The preceding unsigned comment was added by QBeam (talk)
  • Private property is a valuable instrumental right...but that doesn't mean it is an absolute or moral right.
  • Warning: You, personally, are advocating slavery. I feel the banhammer coming down very quickly if you wish to continue with this line of discussion. Rob Smith 13:41, 18 October 2007 (EDT)
Firstly, I most certainly do not advocate slavery, and I object to your slanderous accusation. If what you meant to say is that one might think it possible to justify slavery from what I've said, then you ought to explain how you believe that is so (so that I will understand your error, and be able to explain it to you). Secondly, this is twice now that you've threatened the "banhammer," and on both occassions based on a grotesque misunderstanding of my position.—The preceding unsigned comment was added by QBeam (talk)
Please begin signing your comments. Rob Smith 13:45, 22 October 2007 (EDT)
Wilco. User:QBeam 2:54, 25 Oct. 2007 (EDT)

--şŷŝoρ-₮K/Ṣρёаќǃ 15:14, 25 October 2007 (EDT)

As amusing as I found the "dead horse" icon, I have to say I found it confusing, as well. Generally, whipping a dead horse is understood to mean arguing an issue in circles or without the prospect of making progress. I don't see how that's applicable either to me or to RobSmith, since the discussion to this point has involved several misapprehensions on his part which I've cleared up. Surely that's fair progress?
On the other hand, what I haven't seen yet is any helpful advice on how the additional content I'm suggesting would be best implemented. After reviewing the sliver of an article on the subject of property, I've decided to try to write an article on private property which includes this material. I've been trying, without success, to determine how new articles are submitted for review, so any hints would be appreciated. User:QBeam 11:04pm 28 Oct. 2007 (EDT)

Capital Letters

I think that communism shouldn't be have capital letters as it hasn't earned that right yet, being the worst form of government ever thought of. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by jesusbushcheney (talk)

Capitalization is not "earned," it is dictated by the rules of grammar. If you have to earn the right to capitalization then all babies would have lower case names, no? HelpJazz 13:36, 28 October 2007 (EDT)

Let's nominate this Talk page for Featured article

I'd like to nominate this Talk page for Featured article status. Rob Smith 23:28, 28 October 2007 (EDT)

File:Lol.gif --şŷŝoρ-₮K/Ṣρёаќǃ 03:32, 29 October 2007 (EDT)

The only talk page I've seen to rival this one in User:Essjay's after the Essjay scandal broke. [13] Rob Smith 20:40, 4 November 2007 (EST)
  • LOL! Rob, Rob, Rob.....this page is like living in a mental institution! I have put it on watch, because it is obvious to me it is full or parodists. Or escapee's from mental institutions. --şyŝoρ-₮K/Ṣρёаќǃ 00:29, 5 November 2007 (EST)
  • I'm trying to capture Community reaction to the Essjay Scandal right now; it can be a real challenge trying not to depart from sense and flavor of the written record. [14] Rob Smith 12:15, 5 November 2007 (EST)

Am I, y'know…

allowed to edit this page? --AngryCommunist 12:01, 1 January 2008 (EST)

I think the wikipedians are better in this case.

Well, you have to dig through pages of criticism, and it doesn't even tell you what Communism aims for. Could someone edit this article? Bias 16:02, 22 January 2008 (EST)

Discuss on talk page?

I don't see why I must discuss changes on the talk page before making them when no one else does. However, in accordance with the directive, I hereby propose that I revert to my version, which is much superior, IMHO. --MakeTomorrow 19:53, 13 February 2008 (EST)

I'll take that as a "yes". --MakeTomorrow 13:57, 16 February 2008 (EST)

MakeTomorrow I would suggest you avoid editing this page due to a COI. All I see in your edits are an attempt to make Communism look better; maybe the one valuable thing I see is that you added Che Guevara to the notable communist.--IDuan 22:22, 16 February 2008 (EST)

Hang on a sec

Now, I'm not saying Communism has ever functioned, but still this page is slightly biased. I believe if this is "The Trustworthy Encyclopedia" that I've been looking, then maybe it should keep a sterile perspective of things. --Reallyforeign 23:21, 17 April 2008 (EDT)

Mistake

There's a mistake in the artle. In the section headed "Demise of communism", it states that each country in the former communist bloc has reformed to capitalism. This is not true, as Moldova remains Communist (though an untotalitatian, democratic form).

I'm new-- hope i'm right in thinking i should bring this up on the talk page before doing any editing :) --Dollfuss

Thanks for pointing it out. Do you happen to have a source that we could use? Learn together 13:39, 29 May 2008 (EDT)

Ah, yes, sorry. Sources:

http://www.terra.es/personal2/monolith/moldova.htm

http://www.allmoldova.com/index.php?action=viewdoc&id=1063305563&lng=eng

The first site is perhaps clearer, as the second site doesn't clarify that 'PCRM' stands for 'Party of Communists in the Republic of Moldova'. -- Dollfuss

The phrase "reformed to capitalism" does not make sense. The opposite of communist totalitarianism would not be a economic system but a political one, i.e., Democracy. Perhaps you were writing from a Marxist perspective? --Ed Poor Talk 08:33, 7 June 2008 (EDT)
The opposite of communism would be a state where a social class of workers do not own the means of production. Hence the opposite is capitalism. Don't confuse your personal ideology and definition of communism with that agreed upon by political scientists, philosophers, economists and the rest of people who've actually made significant study of what communism is and means. Xyrophile 17:22, 7 June 2008 (EDT)

Problems

This is more of an attack on the modern day attempts at implementing a communist system, than it is an informative page on the Communist system of political thought. There is a difference and I recommend creating an article dealing with political theory, as this page is fallacious and doesn't inform much on Communism at all.

Theory Section

I've cleaned up the theory section as it was stocked with more than a few misconceptions Xyrophile 08:55, 5 June 2008 (EDT)

I reverted all your changes. For one thing, your comment about
countries commonly described as "communist,"
represents the usual quibble provided by communist apologists who refuse to judge Communism by its actual fruits.
It doesn't matter what the "theory" is. The present article is not a critique of Marxism but about how actual Communist governments have behaved. Perhaps part of the evaluation of Communism (compared to democracy) should be about how the theory tends to be disregarded, distorted, or misused. It seems to be much harder to abuse democracy; maybe that's why God has blessed the United States of America so much.
Some of your criticisms and other observations may be more useful in our Socialism article. You might write about the attempts to establish socialism in the USSR. --Ed Poor Talk 08:31, 7 June 2008 (EDT)

So your argument is that there's no place for an explanation of communist theory in the theory section of the page on communism? For that matter, to evaluate communism "compared to democracy" is as nonsensical as evaluating capitalism "compared to democracy" or evaluating apples "compared to oranges." You'll note I've made no attempt to hide or downplay the horrible atrocities of the USSR or others, but generally countries that have described themselves as communist have been autocratic dictatorships. How on earth does attempting to hide the distinction between what the theory prescribes and the actions of countries that claimed to be communist support the goal of creating "the trustworthy encyclopedia" ? It seems your reverts are based on personal ideology more than any supported fact, and worse yet, in terms of theory are quite completely wrong. For instance, the dictatorship of the proletariat refers to "the transition period between capitalist and communist society ‘in which the state can be nothing but the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat’ (Critique of the Gotha Programme, 1875)" (source)

Essentially, you don't seem to actually understand what communism is. Instead, you seem insistent on spouting half-truths, complete fabrications and false tautologies. I suggest you find another moderator for this page if you are unwilling to better educate yourself on the matter. May I suggest an introduction to Political Science at your local college or university? Xyrophile 12:29, 7 June 2008 (EDT)


Problems with the current theory section:

Commandment 1: Everything you post must be true and verifiable

"Communism is based upon Marxism, a philosophy which uses materialism to explain all physical and social phenomena."

  • This is false. The concept of communism dates back to at least the 6th century BC. Marxism is a political philosophy which seeks to implement communism. Marxism is based on Marx's theory of historical materialism, a materialist conception of history based on the analsys of labour and production.

"Economically, communism advocates a socialist economy in which the public owns the "means of production"."

  • This is true.

"In countries where communism has been imposed, the government has taken ownership of farms, factories, stores and so on in the name of the people; see "dictatorship of the proletariat"."

  • This is riddled with errors, No country has had communism imposed upon it. Some countries have sought to implement communism, but invariably have become dictatorships with socialist economies. Dictatorship of the proletariat is NOT communism, and not synonymous with the nationalization of private enterprises.
For Marx, the transition period between capitalist and communist society ‘in which the state can be nothing but the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat’ (Critique of the Gotha Programme, 1875). The proletariat would assume state power aiming to eliminate the old relations of production. It would replace these relations with a class dictatorship which would both place the productive forces under proletarian control and pave the way for the abolition of class distinctions culminating in a classless society. The Communist Manifesto (1848) stated that the result would be ‘an association in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all’.

Marx used the expression very infrequently and when he did employ it, he appeared to understand the word ‘dictatorship’ as meaning a concentration of power or forces rather than as a repressive situation. A different model of transition is offered in The Civil War in France (1871) based upon the experience of the Paris Commune. It stressed the immediate dismantling of the state apparatus, the decentralization of power and popular democratic control over and management of civil society. The ‘commune’ and ‘dictatorship’ models coexist uneasily in Marx's work.

-from the The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics

This drives all market-based economic activity underground and leads to inefficiencies and shortages.

  • This might be supported if a communist country actually existed, but none has existed to date . In theory, the nationalization and merger of enterprises would increase inefficiency by eliminating redundancy. With an even distribution of wealth, shortages only occur if the total production of the nation falls.

"In both the Soviet Union and Red China, the number of people who starved to death when the government confiscated their farm products (animals and grain) is estimated in the tens of millions of souls."

  • This is true, but not related to communist theory, which is what this section is actually about.

"Members of the ruling party (see Nomenklatura) have special stores in which ordinary people are barred, stores which are immune to the shortages which the lower class must endure (see queuing)."

  • This has been true in some countries ruled by communist parties, but not all, and stands contrary to the aims and theory of communism.

"Various communist doctrines have evolved or been adapted to the time and place they have been implemented. Marxism, developed by Karl Marx, and its modifications under Vladimir Lenin, Joseph Stalin, and Mao Zedong, advocates the overthrow of the existing order by a revolution of the proletariat, the social group which does not control the means of production. The goal of Marxism is supposedly to create a classless society which would result in no longer the need for any government."

  • This is true, although the use of supposedly here seems like a callous attempt to undermine the point.

"The most famous government to label itself "communist" is the former USSR or the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics; the Communist Party controlled its government from 1922 to 1991. This government was officially atheist and attempted to suppress all religion."

  • This is mostly true, although you may wish to do some reading on the USSR's relationship with the orthodox church, as its considerably more nuanced than this phrase might indicate. However, this, once again, has nothing to do with communist theory.

"Like many authoritarian regimes, it tried to cultivate reverence for the state as a psychological substitute for religion."

  • Got any sources to support that?

"Left-wing critics of the USSR charged that it was communist in name only, and had betrayed the revolution which founded it. George Orwell expressed this viewpoint eloquently in his 1945 fable Animal Farm."

  • It's not just left-wing critics. The very constitution of the USSR states that it is a socialist country, not a communist one.


"Marxist theory is intended to appeal to its adherents with the phrase, "from each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs", which essentially states point blank a worker does not get paid according to his abilities, and there is no incentive within the economic theory."

  • In the countries you describe as "communist," there is variation between wages of workers commensurate with ability. In a true communist society, there's no actual need for wages or money at all. This being said, you've limited yourself to the assumption that the personal accumulation of wealth is the only possible incentive in an economy.

"Another quote by Marx was, "The theory of the Communism may be summed up in the single sentence: Abolition of private property," or as some have phrased it, legalized theft."

  • I take it you did not actually read the quote from Marx.
When, therefore, capital is converted into common property, into the property of all members of society, personal property is not thereby transformed into social property. It is only the social character of the property that is changed. It loses its class character.
Nothing is taken away, it's a change in the way property is generated.

Xyrophile 16:29, 7 June 2008 (EDT)

I wish you would read my article, Wikipedia:Avoid personal remarks. We can cooperate better if you refrain from assuming I am arguing for something, or that I don't understand something.

I know there is a difference between Communism, the political system established in USSR, China, Cuba, North Korea etc. - and "communism", the stateless society envisioned and/or predicted by Marx. The present article critiques big-C Communism on account of its utter failure to achieve small-c communism. Perhaps you felt I was ignoring the difference between the two terms?

If you want to work with me on this article, I hope you will join me in being consistent about the usage of the Big-C and small-c terms. It will only confuse the reader of we fail to distinguish between political systems created by Communist Parties and Workers Parties - and the stateless ideal society envisioned by Marx that would come after the socialist states created by the parties "withered away". Do you agree that there is a difference and that we should tell the reader clearly about it? --Ed Poor Talk 18:23, 12 June 2008 (EDT)

I'd also argue that you should distinguish between the oppressive failure Communist states such as Stalin's USSR, and the Democratic 'diluted' Communist nations such as Cyprus and Moldova today. They don't adher to strict collectivisation, but they aim to achieve more equality of wage and status in the existing system, as they agree with the theoretical Communism. PLEASE don't go and tar them with the same brush as the oppressive USSR. -- Dollfuss.

I'm not tarring anyone with a brush, but calling a spade a spade. A government based on Communist theories deserves to be called "Communist". Quibbles about whether that government has attained the professed ideal of Communists are unrelated to the type of government.

The real point here (and the elephant in the living room) is that no Communist government has come anywhere near to "achieving communism". Hence, the old Russian joke about the securest job in the Soviet Union ("waiting for communism to be achieved").

My critique of Communism is that it has absolutely no chance of achieving its stated ideal. It espouses violence to gain control over the means of production but has no provision for how the new rulers and masters would ever be motivated to give up their control voluntarily. --Ed Poor Talk 18:36, 19 June 2008 (EDT)

Neither Cyprus nor Moldova, with ruling Communist parties, indulge in violence to achieve their aims. Saying that all Communist parties do is a generalisation and a simplification. -- Dollfuss

My edits a few minutes ago

I've reverted a couple of Jjameson's edits, and here I explain why.

He removed the claim that communism was atheistic, citing in his edit comment http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/CC/fca5.html. This page doesn't, in fact, directly address that question, and I'm not sure why Jjameson thought it did. It does, however, implicitly support the claim that communism is atheistic:

...Cabet's plan for a perfect utopian community based on the principles of evolutionary communism ... Cabet believed that environment determined human nature and that people, whom he saw as perfectible and rational, would produce a perfect society when placed in a perfect environment.

Evolution, believing that (only) the environment determines human nature, and that people could, without God, produce a perfect environment, are all atheistic ideas.

Jjameson was also a bit heavy-handed with the {{fact}} tag, although looking through them, most of them are legitimate. So I only removed one. I hope to remove a couple more before too long, once I find a reference for a couple of quotes.

Philip J. Rayment 18:38, 19 March 2009 (EDT)

I'm sorry, I was trying quickly to find a source that supported that some christians (or, for that matter, any religious people) promote Communism. The search result seemed like that supported my claim, but I had not properly read the entire article. I am curious, however, how Wikipedia can have such a lengthy article on Christian Communism[15] without such a thing existing. Perhaps I am being fooled by Wikipedia's liberal bias?Jjameson 19:22, 19 March 2009 (EDT)
I'd say that you've been fooled by Wikipedia's anti-Christian bias! More to the point, that there might be a Christian version of communism doesn't refute that communism, as invented, is inherently atheistic. A parallel is the existence of "theistic evolution", a view that says that God created by using a method (evolution) that was designed to explain life without God being required! The mere existence of a self-contradictory point of view does not refute that the views are contradictory.
Communism and Christianity do, in a sense, have a lot in common, which might go some way to explaining the existence of so-called Christian communism. As I saw an atheist write many years ago (this is from memory, not a direct quote), the difference between communism and Christianity is that communism is driven by force, whereas Christianity is driven by love. That is, communists (supposedly) share their wealth because they have to, whereas Christians share their wealth because they want to. The other big difference is the result: Communism fails economically, because it takes away the incentive to work. Christian countries succeed economically (and America is the classic example (over the long term)), because there is an incentive to work.
Wikipedia wouldn't compliment Christianity in this way, which is why you're unlikely to learn this from them.
Philip J. Rayment 19:42, 19 March 2009 (EDT)

Is Communism Atheistic In Nature?

Of course it is. A lack religion is fundamental to the concept of Communism/Marxism. Sources have been provided, I don't see a need to edit war over it. --Jeffrey W. LauttamusDiscussion 19:17, 19 March 2009 (EDT)

This quote is from Karl Marx in his "Communist Manifesto", section II (Proletarians and Communists): [16]

"There are, besides, eternal truths, such as Freedom, Justice, etc., that are common to all states of society. But communism abolishes eternal truths, it abolishes all religion, and all morality, instead of constituting them on a new basis; it therefore acts in contradiction to all past historical experience." Karajou 19:56, 19 March 2009 (EDT)
Could that quote not be implying that all forms of religion are evil or wrong but instead imply that the government should have no hand in religion?

Generalisation.

Ed Poor, please reply. I stated that it's just wrong to accuse every communist state of violence. Stalinist Russia may have indulged in Violence, but communist Cyprus and Moldova today aren't violent at all. It's just dishonest.

You might as well accuse Christian states of violence, citing the Christian Austria of May 1932- July 1943 as "proof" due to it's Christian ideology and violent repressive tendencies. -- Dollfuss.

  • Dollfuss, please read our Conservapedia Commandments, which you are in violation of with your constant talk, talk, talk, and absolutely no substantive contributions. This is an encyclopedia project, a conservative, Christian friendly one, not a debating society or posting board. --₮K/Admin/Talk 21:04, 4 April 2009 (EDT)

Unexplained edit revert

I would like to kindly ask for an explanation for why somebody has a problem with me changing the sentence "It is based on Karl Marx's proposed establishment of a "classless society", but its philosophical basis is so deeply flawed that no Communist country has ever achieved its stated goal..." by removing the bolded portion. I was simply trying to make Conservapedia a better, more un-biased, place. If you could tell me what is wrong with that, I would greatly appreciate it. Luminite2 23:53, 9 April 2009 (EDT)

Sorry I didn't leave a revert reply. If it was bias, then I agree you were right. However, it is true and therefore it returned to the paragraph. Don't take offense, I appreciate your contributions here. --Jpatt 00:00, 10 April 2009 (EDT)
First of all, thank you for that very civil response. However, I must point out that it seems to me to be an unfair statement. Mainly, it is because I feel that Communism was, in and of itself, not "bad", as it was trying to create a society where everybody was equal. The problem was that the governments who claimed to be Communist were not actually Communist, they distorted it hugely for their own gain. At the very least, could the portion in question be changed to "its philosophical basis is widely believed to be flawed, such that..."? Luminite2 00:15, 10 April 2009 (EDT)
I don't have a problem with that statement.--Jpatt 00:32, 10 April 2009 (EDT)

Pros and Cons

Ok. I'll admit that COmmunism is not perfect, yet there are some pros,

1) cheap public services, Soviet Trains were much more effective and cheaper than American or European 2) Full employment 3) Brilliant education, I went to a cuban school, they have 100% literacy rate and are brilliant if you want to do medicine



Communism and racisim should bge included. Marx said that,"the classes and the races to weak to adapit to the new conditions must perish in the revolutionary holocoast. He belived that the Polish people had no reason to exisit. For information I would watch "The Soviet Story". -jowns.

Main Image

Somehow the image just doesn't seem to give readers a good view into communism. I think it could go better in the article about mass murder. What if we changed the picture to something more relevant about what communism is? A Picture of Stalin? --Cidd11 12:09, 20 October 2009 (EDT)

I agree...the "Goddess of Democracy" just doesn't convey the image of communism that should be here. Why not put in a pic of the Chinese kid facing down the tank? Or a pic of the Soviet gulags; or the hundreds of thousands of skeletons from the Cambodian killing fields; or the Berlin Wall. I think those would illustrate it much better. Karajou 12:25, 20 October 2009 (EDT)

Communist purges

I just changed the text under the gulag photo to "victims of communist purges" as "victims of communism" just didn't sound very compelling. Purges gives a better impression of what those governments were all about.--Matthew2208 16:25, 6 November 2009 (EST)

Scripture

Does anyone have an example of the Scripture that communists quote being used? It just seems to take up space. If we put in an example that might make it a little more usefull in the article. Otherwise I have never heard this used in the defense of communism.--Matthew2208 18:48, 27 November 2009 (EST)

If no one has any interest in this section I am opting to remove it. Though I would like anyone of the opinion that we should keep it to say so. I do not think it benefits the article.--Matthew2208 12:37, 18 December 2009 (EST)

The quotation is used a lot. It is an example of a major tactic of deceit used by Communists. Please do not delete it. --Ed Poor Talk 12:44, 18 December 2009 (EST)

Barack Obama and his minions

Aren't Barack Obama and his minions Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid communists? They're trying to take over the auto industry, healthcare industry, banking industry, and insurance industry, which is communist style. DMorris 17:53, 23 January 2010 (EST)

well it's actually socialism, and it was George Bush who took over autos, banking and insurance. Obama wants healthcare, but he won't make it because his party just moved two notches to the right after the Mass. election. RJJensen 17:58, 23 January 2010 (EST)
I wouldn't call Pelosi & Reid Obama's minions, they've been around alot longer than him, and are likely to remain past his term of office. Obama, it seems, is a bit player in the larger history of the CPUSA. A year ago the debate was whether he was a witting or unwitting ally of the movement. Apologists claimed he was just a dupe, but now we have more perspective. Rob Smith 18:07, 23 January 2010 (EST)
Obama has nothing to do with the CPUSA, AFAIK, but it's true that Pelosi and Reid are both more influential forces within the Democrat hierarchy than Obama. He could win, that is what mattered. But he is an outsider to the DP hierarchy of power, and that's unlikely to change, at least in the short term. --BishoiH 18:15, 23 January 2010 (EST)
Obama has nothing to do with the CPUSA? See Frank Chapman, for instance, published in the CPUSA official organ People's Daily World. The Barack Hussein Obama article has at least two more direct cites the official CPUSA website, one about the 1000's of CPUSA community organizers working to get him elected, another written by the CPUSA's Education Committte Chairperson eulogizing Vernon Jarrett (father-in-law of high level Obama White House advisor Valeria Jarrett) who issued a clarion call on his deathbed to elect Barack Obama. Rob Smith 20:57, 23 January 2010 (EST)
Here's the direct links: Barack_Hussein_Obama#Primary_election_.282004.29; Young_Communist_League#Barack_Obama. Rob Smith 22:06, 23 January 2010 (EST)

Communism in Cambodia

Communism is not good at all. Pol Pot, the Communist leader in Cambodia killed many people in his effort to rid the "intellectuals" of Cambodia to prevent uprisings against his government. He taught the people that there was nobody that you could trust except the Party(Pol Pot and his followers). He also taught children to make sure nobody disobeyed him, he made them insensitive to loss of life. I've been to Cambodia, the people there are poor. There are a lot of scars in that country's history.

[[17]]

Atheism is not exclusively a communist ideal - libertarian and anti-communist Ayn Rand was an atheist

As said above, Ayn Rand is a famous libertarian and inspiration for the Tea Party movement, and she was an atheist and an anti-communist. It is the totalitarian atheism of Marxism that is violent - it is not a matter of freedom to be non-religious, but is a matter of being be forced to be an atheist while hypocritically worshipping Marx and Lenin who are idols in communism. Why not have the intro focus on the fact that communism is based on the violent jealousy of people who have wealth?--TheQuestioner 13:19, 3 August 2012 (EDT)

The million death figure

The only way you could approach that number would be to factor in all the deaths created by WWII in China and the USSR, all the deaths caused by sectarian violence between Chinese nationalists, and all the deaths caused by incidental famines and mismanagement of communist regimes. While there were undoubtedly deaths as a result of Leninist (and later Stalinist) ideology (which many would argue is not Marxist since it does not follow the ideal set out by Marx), you cannot simply say "X number of people died under communist governments, therefore they are bad." If that were the case you could take the millions killed in the innumerable wars in Europe, any number of the millions killed by Islam, the millions killed by America in its expansion into North America, and then declare that all Christian nations are bad because their death toll rises into the billions. The logic of these numbers is ridiculous. EricIbar 16:04, 31 January 2013 (EST)

  • there were undoubtedly deaths as a result of Leninist (and later Stalinist) ideology (which many would argue is not Marxist since it does not follow the ideal set out by Marx);
Many? How many of the "many" who argued that Lenin and Stalin do not follow the ideal set out by Marx survived Lenin and Stalin? OscarO 18:33, 31 January 2013 (EST)

It Is Questionable That Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Il, and Kim Jong Un Are Communists

In the article, Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Il, and Kim Jong Un are listed as communist leaders. However, this is too simplistic / incorrect. I suppose one could say that Kim Il Sung was originally a communist, but certainly Kim Jong Il and Kim Jong Un are not. They instead followed / follow the Juche ideology, which according to the North Korean Government from this webpage is an ideology that focuses on self reliance and independence from others. Since 2009, references to communism have been removed from the North Korean constitution, per this article. Furthermore, the statues of Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin were removed from Pyongyang in 2012 per this article. Therefore, it would be incorrect to list them as communists, because they follow the Juche ideology, which is essentially a right wing nationalist ideology featuring the socialist principal of a command economy and the ownership of all the means of production by the State. Jansky 09:44, 16 August 2014 (EDT)

re: It Is Questionable That Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Il, and Kim Jong Un Are Communists

3 things:

1. According to Kim Jong-il:

"The revolutionary theory of Kimilsungism is a revolutionary theory which has provided solutions to problems arising in the revolutionary practice in a new age different from the era that gave rise to Marxism–Leninism. On the basis of Juche (idea), the leader gave a profound explanation of the theories, strategies and tactics of national liberation, class emancipation and human liberations in our era. Thus, it can be said that the revolutionary theory of Kimilsungism is a perfect revolutionary theory of Communism in the era of Juche." (Shin, Gi-wook (2006). Ethnic Nationalism in Korea: Genealogy, Politics, and Legacy. Stanford University Press.)

So Juche is a form of communism. And communism is part of the left part of the political spectrum. So your claim about it being right wing is incorrect.

As far as self-reliance being taught, perhaps the North Korean leaders desired North Korean communists to be busy communist worker bees. North Korea has a history of asking for financial support from Communist China.

2. As far as Juche ideology being very different that Marxist-Leninism, I do know that atheists/leftists commonly lie so I am a little skeptical that Juche ideology is very different. Juche ideology may have been created by a bunch of intellectual lazy, obese, atheist Asian copycats. See: Atheism and deception

I do have a strong respect for the South Koreans and their country has had a lot of success after the Korean War.

At the same time, in recent times and during a large portion of the 20th century, Asians are known for copying many things in the West. I don't fault them for this. Why not copy others successful methods when it is practical to do so (I am not saying that Marxism-Leninism was successful, but merely that Asians have copied many successful things in the West). Also, there is some evidence that rice agriculture leads to more collectivists thinking and less innovative/individualistic thinking.[18][19]

Also, the North Korean communists leaders have been overweight, atheist slobs. See: Atheism and obesity. And medical science indicates that being overweight/obese causes brain impairment. See: Physical and mental health related problems associated with obesity

So the Korean communists may certainly have been intellectually lazy/ineffectual in terms of forming a substantially different ideology. But is possible. Maybe their culture and national/atheistic pride caused them to make substantial changes to communist ideology, but I am skeptical. If I am not mistaken, although Maoism certainly existed, the Chinese communists still considered themselves to be Marxists-Leninists too.

3. So a few questions:

A. How do we really know that Juche ideology is substantially different from Marxist-Leninism in theory?

B. Why is Juche ideology substantially different that Marxist-Leninism in actual practice? For example, do people own their own homes in North Korea? To what degree can they keep the labors of their work and give it to their descendants? Conservative 12:42, 16 August 2014 (EDT)

re: re: It Is Questionable That Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Il, and Kim Jong Un Are Communists

The Juche ideology is in fact different from Marxism-Leninism in theory, because it is a nationalist ideology. How did I come to this conclusion? It is because Juche is about self-reliance, and independence from other nations. Maxism-Leninism does not call for nationalism. It calls for cooperation between people and nations. In fact, one of the end goals of communism in theory is the withering away of the state, all states, so that there will be no nationalism. Nationalism is a right-wing ideology.

As far as Marxism-Leninism vs. Juche in practice, on the surface they may look identical, but under the surface there are in fact differences. One of the core tenets of Juche is the supremacy of the leaders of the state, to the point where they are infallible, and cannot be criticized, even after their death. However, this was / is not true for other communist countries. Krushchev criticized Stalin after his death, and Deng Xiaoping criticized Mao Zedong after he died as well. The main similarities between Juche and Marxism-Leninism are economic, but that does not mean that Juche cannot be a right-wing ideology. Take, for example Similarities between Communism, Nazism and liberalism, in which similarities in economic ideology between the National Socialist ideology and Communism, right and left wing ideologies respectively, are presented.

As far as your point about Mao, you are correct about them being both Maoists and Communists (although Mao's influence in current politics is rather weak), however, unlike the North Koreans, they have not disavowed communism in their constitution. In fact, it contains many references to socialism and communism (you can read it in English here. Maoism is essentially a one word change from Communism: proletariat to peasant, to suit the economic conditions there during the revolution. You could also count in Mao's ideology of constant revolution and upheaval, but this was not practiced after Mao's death.

I also have to disagree with you on your chain of logic with atheists being fat and stupid. As far as I understand, this is your logic:

1. Atheists tend to be obese 2. Obese people tend to be mentally impaired 3. Mentally impaired people tend to make poor decisions / are stupid

Regardless of the truth of these statements (which I believe is not the case), the logic doesn't work. In North Korea, where most of the people are forced to be atheist, one would expect a moderate amount of obese people. However, obesity is only restricted to the top leadership. Why? Because that's where all the food goes. No matter if you are atheist or not, you cannot become obese if there is not a surplus of food to eat.

Also, your logic states that Government Christie of New Jersey and Paul LePage of Maine would be mentally impaired and make poor decisions because they are obese. However, certainly you cannot believe this, as you seem to be a conservative.

Jansky 15:12, 16 August 2014 (EDT)

re: re: re: It Is Questionable That Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Il, and Kim Jong Un Are Communists

A few points:

1. You didn't convince me that nationalism is a right wing ideology although right wing people are less into globalism. For example, did Russia call the shots in the Soviet Union? If memory serves, the non-Russian areas of the Soviet Union were often treated like satellites. France is pretty leftist and nationalistic as well. The French even take measures to keep their language "pure". Plus, China is a leftist country and now that China has more economic power, they are starting to be more nationalistic and pushing other Asian countries around via border disputes, etc.

2. You put words in my mouth as far as North Korea/atheism/obesity plus you didn't address the fact that North Korean communist leaders have been overweight and that being overweight does cause brain impairment. I cited an article which cites medical journals that indicate that being overweight does cause brain impairment. Why shouldn't I believe that Korean communist leaders are intellectually slothful/lazy and less innovative in their thinking in terms of forming a significantly different political ideology? They have certainly been lazy in terms of exercise. :)

Also, being significantly overweight/obese does cause brain impairment regardless of a person's ideology. A conservative who is significantly overweight/obese is going to be less mentally fit and the same is true of a leftist. But you are being imprecise and/or dishonest here as I merely raised obesity in terms of innovation in political thinking and not correctness of thinking. And as an aside, Christie is a RINO and not a conservative.

3. You also didn't address the issue that atheists/leftists often engage in lies/propaganda and that Juche may only be claimed to be significantly different. There certainly has been a lot of propaganda in atheistic communist countries. See: Militant atheism

4. You didn't acknowledge the fact that Kim Jong-il said North Korea is a communist country which was very shabby on your part. This was the whole point of your talk page post. I am getting the feeling that you are a proud person who cannot be reasoned with and does not easily admit error.

5. Due #2,#3 and #4, I don't think you want to engage in true dialogue. You seem to want to ignore points and be dishonest as well. Accordingly, I have no desire to communicate with you further. Conservative 17:13, 16 August 2014 (EDT)

Re-adding deleted Category of Category:Anti Second Amendment

I am re-adding User:JoeyJ's strange deletion of my categorization of communism as Category:Anti Second Amendment. There is nothing more Anti Second Amendment than communists. Perhaps he should read the book by Cleon Skousen The Naked Communist. I am not saying this applies to User:JoeyJ, but sometimes there is trouble with liberal denial on CP. Perhaps it is from the influence of living in Germany (Category:European_conservapedians.

Secondly, JoeyJ's deleting my See Also reference to National Socialism (a.k.a Nazis) also doesn't make sense since the National Socialists had a LOT more in common with the Communists than they had differences. Many liberals, Germans and Europeans from "left-leaning" EU countries don't like to call the Nazis by their real name "National Socialists" since it make quotidian commonplace European support of modern socialism look bad. Now I finally understand why JoeyJ so strongly disagreed with my categorization of Charlie Hebdo as part of Category:Communists and Category:Gun control. Joey said, "Charlie Hebdo is not related to Communism and Gun control." (Source: http://www.conservapedia.com/index.php?title=Charlie_Hebdo&diff=prev&oldid=1132024). TheAmericanRedoubt 13:15, 17 January 2015 (EST)

Great resource

Great article series by The Epoch Times: [20] This is a lot of information (too much for me to incorporate into this article), but this series essentially shows how cultural Marxism (along with communism in general) is operating in the West today. --1990'sguy (talk) 14:08, 26 April 2019 (EDT)

Timestamp

  • Gun control‏‎ (429,179 views)
  • Communism‏‎ (429,155 views)
  • Revolution‏‎ (423,279 views)

RobSTrump 2Q2Q 21:30, 1 September 2020 (EDT)

Look at this trolling edit

Blocking a highway wedged between The Black Book of Communism and Prof. Rummel. [21] RobSFree Kyle! 21:52, 1 May 2021 (EDT)

It is a mockery of communist Crimes Against Humanity. RobSFree Kyle! 21:53, 1 May 2021 (EDT)

I... fail to see how that's a trolling edit. Want an actual trolling edit? Try this [22] Pokeria1 (talk) 22:45, 1 May 2021 (EDT)
Move the citation to a more appropriate location within the body of text in the article. Better yet, create text from the citation and add to the article. RobSFree Kyle! 22:48, 1 May 2021 (EDT)
In case you're wondering, Rob, that edit (which, despite your claim otherwise, is not a "trolling" edit) was put there as part of the group of related reflinks because it makes note of how many people were slaughtered under Communist regimes over the years:
Communism killed more than 200 million people in the 20th century by some estimates, but after decades of leftist indoctrination in schools, Americans are openly demanding Communism.
Northwest (talk) 00:42, 2 May 2021 (EDT)
Communists March Through Austin, Texas – Praise Mass Murderers, Block Intersections in May Day Demonstration. Then add the relevancy of the citation somewhere in Communism#Communism_in_the_United_States section. RobSFree Kyle! 01:17, 2 May 2021 (EDT)
Just as an FYI, I don't agree with the rule on not reverting an admin's edit. What's to say an admin doesn't, say, decide to vandalize the page, blank out the Communism article and replaces it with "I love communism", for example. Should we let it stay just because it was done by an admin? Or are we obligated to restore old edits if vandalized, even if the one who did it was an admin? Pokeria1 (talk) 19:34, 2 May 2021 (EDT)
Here is the list of CP Admin. If anyone of these Admins uses the Revert button, i.e., not "Undo", you are free to ask on the talk page of that same article why. Simple rule: Do Not Undo a Revert. Secondly, Undoing an 'Undo' without discussion on talk page is initiating an edit war. RobSFree Kyle!
I still don't buy it. On Simpsons Wiki, we had an admin outright vandalize the entire wiki due to throwing a fit, basically changing it to claim it dealt with AIDS. And we also had something similar happen across Wikia at the time when some admin jerks at the Mass Effect Wiki decided to vandalize whole Wiki sites enmasse. If anything, stuff like that is one reason a rule of not reverting an Admin shouldn't exist. Let's suppose I were a CP Admin, and I decided to vandalize a page thinking as an admin, I could do so. Would you follow the rule and avoid reverting my edit under any circumstances, or would you do whatever it takes to stop vandalism? Me? I'd probably do whatever it takes to restore edits and undo vandalism, even if said vandalism was done by an admin. Pokeria1 (talk) 20:12, 2 May 2021 (EDT)