What is a communist, and what do communists believe?
- Written by Aminda Smith, Associate Professor of History, Michigan State University
Throughout history, there have been many different views on what communism is, how it should be organized and how it might be achieved. The most famous theories about communism are probably the ones that were developed by a German philosopher named Karl Marx[13]. His ideas are often called Marxism[14].
Marx studied history and observed that the way people produced goods and services was closely related to who held power. For example, in farming societies, those who owned the land had more power than those who did not.
Marx also noticed that people with less power had often risen up, usually violently, to overthrow the powerful people. He called this concept class struggle. He believed this process was how societies developed from one system of government and economy to another. He claimed that class struggle led societies through a progression toward greater efficiency in the production of goods and services, higher levels of technology and wider distribution of social and political power.
When Marx was alive in the 1800s, an economic and political system called capitalism had developed in many countries. In capitalist societies, the economy centered on factories. Factory owners had significant political and economic influence.
Marx observed that in countries such as Germany, England and the United States, factory owners hired laborers who worked long hours producing goods such as shirts or tables. While the factory owners sold these products at high prices, they paid the workers very little. As a result, the factory owners became richer, while many workers struggled to afford the goods they produced or even to provide food for their families.
Marx believed that this inequality would eventually lead to a worker uprising[15]. During their revolution, Marx predicted, the workers would seize control of the factories, begin running them more fairly, and this would lead to a new political system, known as socialism.
Where does socialism fit in?
Library of Congress[16]Of course, if the workers staged a revolution, the factory owners would fight back. Marx thought that, immediately after the revolution, the workers would first need to create a strong government to prevent the owners from reestablishing capitalism. During that phase, which Marx called socialism, the workers would run the government while they continued moving away from capitalism and trying to create a more equal society.
Marx thought people would eventually see that socialism was much better than capitalism because socialism would end exploitation while still allowing a society to continue moving toward better economic and political practices, but without inequality. Once that happened, a government would no longer be necessary.
The society would become communist. There would still be governance, but not a government that was separated from the people. Rather, in a communist society, the people would govern together, and everyone would do some of the work and receive what they needed.
There are Communist parties in many places, and many are currently working to move their countries toward communism. At this time, no country has yet made the transition to full communism, but many people still hope that transition will happen somewhere, sometime. Those people are communists. Communists are optimistic that humans can one day create a more fair and equal society.
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References
- ^ Curious Kids (theconversation.com)
- ^ CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com (theconversation.com)
- ^ history of communism (scholar.google.com)
- ^ well supported by historical evidence (yalebooks.yale.edu)
- ^ history has shown communism not to work (groveatlantic.com)
- ^ including Russia (www.britannica.com)
- ^ China (www.cfr.org)
- ^ five countries (www.britannica.com)
- ^ working to transition from capitalism to communism (www.britannica.com)
- ^ Communists (www.britannica.com)
- ^ collective ownership (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ John Jabez Edwin Mayal via Wikimedia Commons (commons.wikimedia.org)
- ^ German philosopher named Karl Marx (plato.stanford.edu)
- ^ Marxism (www.britannica.com)
- ^ inequality would eventually lead to a worker uprising (www.marxists.org)
- ^ Library of Congress (www.loc.gov)
- ^ CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com (theconversation.com)
Authors: Aminda Smith, Associate Professor of History, Michigan State University
Read more https://theconversation.com/what-is-a-communist-and-what-do-communists-believe-234255