Originally posted by Blaupanzer
True, Che, as far as it goes. Unfortunately, a dictatorship complete with a special class available only to senior party members and selected Government officials was not what Marx had in mind.
True, Che, as far as it goes. Unfortunately, a dictatorship complete with a special class available only to senior party members and selected Government officials was not what Marx had in mind.
Except that wasn't clear until later. Hell, it didn't even happen until later. It wasn't until the late twenties that the state bureaucracy held firm control of the party, and through the party, the government.
By the end of the 1930s, almost the entire generation of the Bolsheviks that led the revolution had been killed (or died of natural causes). Two thirds of the delegates to the 1932 Communist Party Congress (the one where Kirov was elected to head the party, but the votes were counted until Stalin won) were later killed.
Regardless of what Marx had in mind, we have to play the cards we're dealt. The Russian Civil War and Allied intervention, despite BeBro's assertions to the contrary, nearly overthrew the revolution, and completely wrecked the country. It was the Allies who started the counter revolution, and who supplied the White armies. Without the Imperialists, at the very least, the Civil War would have been considerably less damaging to Russia. It might not even have happened, but that's just speculation.
We can't know what the Russian Revolution would have looked like if the Civil War hadn't necessitated crack downs on those politically supporting the counter-revolution or the complete nationalization of industry overnight. But to ignore the effects of that war completely, as you are wont to do, is just as much a fallacy as asserting what might have happened if only. . . .
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