It was an aborted experiment. For starters, the Russian revolution had been brewing since 1905; what actually set it off was a bunch of women. All of that was erased in Stalin's revised history. He had no intention of attempting the Marxist vision: he was an emperor. The regime made some changes according to the (reasonably conceived but badly implemented) agenda: consolidating farms; nationalizing industries, and some social reforms like free education and health care. But the stratification continued, only with different players in the top three tiers of the hierarchy.For Russia, communism was a grand; but, failed experiment, according to Google. — Shawn
Nothing like that. The soviets ('governing council'; something like trade unions) already existed and had considerable political influence.There was a thread on the previous philosophy forum, something to the matter stating that with central managers being coal workers or shoe salesmen, then it wouldn't seem hard to conclude that the whole endeavor would have failed. — Shawn
Huh? If a computer can do the work of all the 'managers' of human societies, and that computer recognized humans as worth keeping, it would distribute goods and services far more equitably than any so-called communist regime. The operative word there being IF.Regarding this, if one day a computer can do the same work central managers can, without any issue about competence, then would communism be not condemned to the ineptitude of Soviet styled central managers? — Shawn
For Russia, communism was a grand; but, failed experiment, — Shawn
What I mean to say is that if the population of Russia’s working class proved to be inadequate for operating its industries, then I’m sure there were measures in place. I would assume more highly educated members of the party would be tasked to this. — EdwardC
Opinion - communism goes against human nature, so it can only be forced on people from above. — T Clark
Hundreds of thousands killed one another. 'They' just conducted one side and took over when the carnage was done.They killed tens, hundreds, of millions of people. — T Clark
Of course it can't. But nobody's ever tried to. What passed for a communist regime was a top tier of pigs, a layer of Dobermans and millions of workhorses.Opinion - communism goes against human nature, so it can only be forced on people from above. — T Clark
They were never given a chance to try.What I mean to say is that if the population of Russia’s working class proved to be inadequate for operating its industries, — EdwardC
Educated? Maybe. The main requirement for managers was loyalty to the regime.I would assume more highly educated members of the party would be tasked to this. — EdwardC
Is democracy a grand but failed experiment? — Tom Storm
Is democracy a grand but failed experiment? — Tom Storm
I feel compelled to ask: doesn't law and order as well? — Outlander
relatable qualities of natural social cohesion and the resulting "values", virtues — Outlander
Hundreds of thousands killed one another. 'They' just conducted one side and took over when the carnage was done. — Vera Mont
Wikipedia says that a very uncertain estimate of deaths caused by Communist regimes is between 60 and 150 million. — T Clark
9 million people die from starvation every year. Should we lay these deaths at the feet of capitalist corporatism? Because I surely do. — Pantagruel
Let me amend that:Wikipedia says that a very uncertain estimate of deaths caused by Communist regimes is between 60 and 150 million. — T Clark
I'm inclined to agree. I can't see communism on a large scale at all, unless it evolves naturally through the stages of democratic socialism. And that cannot happen in a monetized economy, because powerful vested interests will do anything to thwart it.It seems plausible to me that any large Communist regime will inevitably end up in tyranny. Again, that's my "seems to me" opinion, not a solid claimi. — T Clark
And that cannot happen in a monetized economy, because powerful vested interests will do anything to thwart it. — Vera Mont
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