Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Nov 12, 2025 7:18 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Wed Nov 12, 2025 6:29 pm
MikeNovack wrote: ↑Wed Nov 12, 2025 5:49 pm
Let's try something else IC. Let's look at something else. If you acknowledge a strain of "leftism" outside of Marxism, that should at least cause you to think in broader terms. I want you to look at the "True Levelers" (aka "Diggers").
World Turned Upside Down
I think that you may find that what many Conservatives fear, and for good reason, is handing to Government overall control of the human economy through models based on redistribution. And when they are also infused with Marxian religious zealousness they are inevitably destructive.
Take Chavez in Venezuela. A revolutionary program where big government did redistribute wealth (oil wealth, not wealth from taxation: i.e. not through contributions of the people) by funding schools, neighborhood improvement projects, literacy projects, while simultaneously using their positions for unreally extreme projects of corruption.
True, this is an historical pattern in Latin America and the underdeveloped world generally, but in each instance where the Marxian model was adopted (a party structure installed) the same outcome results.
Well, we agree on all that.
There's a root problem that Marxism cannot beat: in order to believe in it, you have to trust human nature absolutely. You have to think, for example, that all the "inequities" or "oppressions" that occur are not bedded in a human propensity toward evil, but merely in some sort of maladjustment of social-environmental circumstance. Rearrange that circumstance, the belief must go, and all will be well; people will no longer be greedy or exploitative, and envy, malice, laziness, covetousness, entitlement...all will vapourize instantly, and utopia will break out.
So, for example, they have to believe that if Marxist conditions are met, nobody will be elitist anymore. Politicians will willingly serve the larger interests, rather than their own. The Party will never betray us. Nobody will steal from or oppress the People. Nobody will crave power, or privilege, or prestige. We'll be able to trust our leaders in every possible way.
And equally, the workers will all become content. None will want more than his share. Nobody will slack off, or free-ride on the work of others. They will work happily, for no reward, and with no resentment. Nobody will be ambitious, or be more keen to take risks in order to obtain more rewards. Nobody will envy. Nobody will become entitled, lazy, or malicious toward co-workers. Nobody will steal from employers, whether in material terms or in taking excessive time off. Nobody will make excuses. Nobody will hateful, spiteful or sly. Nobody will sin.
At the same time, Marxists are totally keen on being vigilant for "counter-revolutionaries," or "oppressors," or "the bourgeois," or "the 10%," or "exploiters," as if the existence of such objectors to Marxism is merely a matter of chance. How these sinners came to exist in the first place, they never ask themselves; for they imagine that man is produced by his social conditions, and never think that social conditions are produced by what man is. In other words, they fail to interrogate human nature, and to see it for what it really is.
They also trust their own nature too much. To be fervent for Marxism is to be exempted from the power of human nature, and made innocent of all sin. So long as one is serving a Marxists vision, one can rob, beat, malign, accuse, dispossess and even murder anybody at all, and it will be righteous. How could it be otherwise, since it serves the highest vision of Marxism? All sins are purged away in the red bath of Marxist self-righteousness. You can always "punch" somebody and be virtuous, so long as you first call him a "Nazi." (Whether he is or not is not to their point. It stops at the mere claim that he is.)
But an idealistic society, coupled with the realities of human nature, is just another kind of exploitation. "Meet the new boss/Same as the old boss," as the lyric goes. Human nature is the root problem. Social conditions are not the exclusive cause of antisocial or evil behaviour; rather, social conditions are the reflection of what human beings create out of their own natural desires. Society is a construct, not a pre-existent fact. But human nature is what it is, and cannot be eradicated by manipulating mere social conditions.
So the Marxists deliver us into the hands of the very creature than invented exploitation, inequality, entitlement, covetousness, graft, greed, spite, bitterness, laziness, selfishness and rage. So having one government, only one Party, and no opposition just means that ordinary people become helpless to protest their treatment or their state.
By contrast, a plural set of parties, each with the demand on it that it must woo public approval through voting, with term limits for all politicians, defined and limited powers of office, public accountability through the press and various watchdog agencies, division of powers among governing bodies, and so forth reflects the recognition that human nature must be managed, and that it's not invariably good. It recognizes that men can be good and trustworthy, but not all men, or not all men forever, and not most men without the support of regulatory restraint.
It's not an ideal system either -- for example, it's adversarial, which is often inconvenient, and the press is not a trustworthy watchdog always, and people do not always support wise candidates. But it at least puts some of the brakes on the worst expressions of human nature in leaders...a thing which Marxism never does.