Posts

Showing posts with the label Marx

Politics of Emotions

  I’VE been thinking of how to introduce this article for some time now. The concept at the center of this is a very unique one, one that only I have ventured to cover in detail, as far as I know. That being said, this means there is no clear precedent for me to take from in order to structure this text. However, I will try my best. To anyone even slightly cognizant of the outside world it is clear that the political climate has changed quite drastically over the last half-century. Once a welcomed and expected civic duty in which civilians hatched out the course of their country, politics is now met with apathy and despair. Although, that is more so the political process , if anything. The political system is met directly by the citizenry via the new art of activism/civil unrest that has caught the World by storm . Politics has certainly changed. Its rules, its ways, its etiquette, all these things have undergone a shift. Society has been impacted by these changes similarly a...

How Marxism is Utopian

  The following article is taken from the Mises Institute article “Marx as Utopian” , itself taken from Rothbard (2006), pp. 364-366. The republication of this article on this site is in accordance with the Mises Institute’s CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 copyright as I have given attribution, do not make any money from this site, and have not altered the original material.   DESPITE Marx’s claim to be a “scientific socialist”, scorning all other socialists whom he dismissed as moralistic and “utopian”, it should be clear that Marx himself was even more in the messianic utopian tradition than were the competing “utopians”. For Marx not only sought a future society that would put an end to history: he claimed to have found the path towards that utopia inevitably determined by the “laws of history”. But a utopian, and a fierce one, Marx certainly was. A hallmark of every utopia is a militant desire to put an end to history, to freeze mankind in a static state, to put an end to diversity...

Why Tyrants Are Invariably Attracted To Socialism

            SOCIALISTS  have a very high view of themselves because they have a very low view of capitalism. Capitalism, for them, is an exploitative, aristocratic, and chaotic ideology that promotes might-makes-right morals and feudalistic tyranny. That socialism promotes the fulfillment and humanity of the worker, that capitalism commodifies and alienates people , these ideas are represented in the posters, logos, quotes, and articles of socialism (just browse the Jacobin or WSWS). Socialists are the moral Übermenschen of human civilization/philosophy, while anyone who does not endorse their noble, egalitarian, collectivist ways are evil greedy bourgeois ; yes, even if you are a poor proletarian yourself .           Yet, despite the very confident and endearing self-image they possess, socialists seem to have time and time again contradicted basic morality. Many socialist regimes launched pogroms and pu...