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From
Intellectual Takeout:
Another name for the neo-Marxism of increasing popularity in the United States is cultural Marxism.”
This theory says that the driving force behind the socialist revolution
is not the proletariat — but the intellectuals. While Marxism has
largely disappeared from the workers' movement, Marxist theory
flourishes today in cultural institutions, in the academic world, and in
the mass media. This “cultural Marxism” goes back to Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937) and the Frankfurt School.
The theorists of Marxism recognized that the proletariat would not play
the expected historical role as a “revolutionary subject.” Therefore,
for the revolution to happen, the movement must depend on the cultural
leaders to destroy the existing, mainly Christian, culture and morality
and then drive the disoriented masses to Communism as their new creed.
The goal of this movement is to establish a world government in which
the Marxist intellectuals have the final say. In this sense, the
cultural Marxists are the continuation of what started with the Russian
revolution.
Led by Lenin, the perpetrators of the revolution regarded their victory in Russia only as the first step to the world revolution. The Russian Revolution was
neither Russian nor proletarian. In 1917, the industrial workers in
Russia represented only a small part of the workforce, which mainly
consisted of peasantry. The Russian Revolution was not the result of a
labor movement but of a group of professional revolutionaries .
A closer look at the composition of the Bolshevist party and of the
first governments of the Soviet state and its repressive apparatus
reveals the true character of the Soviet revolution as a project that
did not aim at freeing the Russian people from the Tsarist yoke but was
to serve as the launchpad for the world revolution.
The experience of World War I and its aftermath
showed that the Marxist concept of the "proletariat" as a revolutionary
force was an illusion. At the example of the Soviet Union, one could
also see that socialism could not function without a dictatorship. These
considerations brought the leading Marxist thinkers to the conclusion
that a different strategy would be required to establish socialism.
Communist authors spread the insight that the socialist dictatorship
must come in disguise. Before socialism can succeed, the existing
culture must change. Control of the culture must precede political
control. (Read more.)
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1 comment:
"...disoriented masses" is an apt description of what happened in the former Soviet Union. It was a failure. so why try it again. Under the current administration in the White House and the positive outcome of giving Capitalism a needed boost proves that it works for the people's benefit and the Country's success.
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