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Title: The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx, Frederick Engels, Robin D. Kelley ISBN: 0-88286-235-9 Publisher: Charles H. Kerr Publishers Company Pub. Date: 1998 Format: Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $5.00 |
Average Customer Rating: 3.52 (187 reviews)
Rating: 4
Summary: An alternate economic & political system?
Comment: Marx's "Communist Manifesto" is a response to human cost of Industrial Revolution. It was a time when Europe was coming of age, with the development of modern industry and the potential world market. This market had an immense development to commerce, to navigation and to industry. These improvements were enacted at a cost of society as a whole divided into two hostile camps -the bourgeoise and the proletariat. Marx immersed himself into the suffrage of the new urban proletariat at the hands of bourgeoise modern capitalist. His solution lay in the abolition of private property living in a society where all are equal.
I found this document an interesting read, as this short concise book simply explains the "theory" of one economic system. It should be noted the democracy prevalent at the time of this books introduction closely resembled an oligarchy, in which the rich and powerful ruled the weak. The impact of socialist ideology on this situation was great: labor movements were created, egalitarianism became a greater part of democracy ideology and the lower classes became more significant to the political system than they had ever been before.
The greatest weakness one can note of Marx's argument, is his failure to predict the significance of the middle class in the nations. Marx's view was that the middle class would either be absorbed into the working class or proprietors. The success of the middle class in present times accounts for the failure of Marx's theory.
Rating: 4
Summary: A specter is haunting Europe - the specter of communism.
Comment: The book begins with a series of prefaces to different worldwide editions. Then, it reaches the core its purpose - the actual pamphlet written by Karl Marx. Marx states that all history is a history of class struggles and predicts that workers all over the world will revolt against the government for their rights and set up a Proletarian state where everything belongs to the state which uses it on the behalf of the people. Marx also shows the need to abolish religion and all other elements of the bourgeoisie, the middle class - factory owners, doctors, employers etc. His belief can be summarized into a single phrase - "Power To The People" (no pun intended). Marx's philosophy may not appeal to many but lets face it - the man is highly responsible for changing the world completely. Would our world be the same without the people he inspired? Lenin, Stalin and Mao would all cease to exist if it was not for Marx. His slogan, "Workers Of All Countries, Unite!" shook the foundations of the world as we knew it.
Sheer fantasy? Time has definitely proven otherwise. I believe that no individual has any right to criticize Marx or his theory without reading the Manifesto Of The Communist Party. Slightly technical language might cause a confusion of facts but otherwise a recommended read.
Rating: 1
Summary: "The Communist Manifesto in the rearview" by RexCurry.net
Comment: "A spectre is haunting Europe," Karl Marx and Frederic Engels wrote in 1848, "the spectre of Communism." And what a deadly spectre it was. Has any book inspired the slaughter of as many people? Everyone needs to read as much of it as they can stand to understand why. It inspired WWII, the Holocaust, the Wholecaust, and every socialist cesspool on earth, including the socialist trio of atrocities: the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, 62 million people slaughtered; the People's Republic of China, 35 million; and the National Socialist German Workers' Party, 21 million, etc., etc., ad nauseum. (numbers from Professor R. J. Rummel's article in the Encyclopedia of Genocide (1999)). As the Journalist Rex Curry pointed out: Communists are nuclear bombs. Communism is nuclear war. This edition helps mourn the 150th anniversary of its publication. Marx and Engels's complete misunderstanding of socialism/communism and its deleterious effect on all aspects of life, from the increasing rift between its victims, to the destruction of the individuals and families, has proven remarkably deadly. Shortages, poverty, misery, rationing, starvation, atrocities, mass slaughter as never seen before or since. Their spectre, manifested in the Manifesto's turgid prose, continues to haunt the libertarian world, lingering as a ghostly apparition even after the collapse of those governments which followed its principles.
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Title: The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli ISBN: 0553212788 Publisher: Bantam Pub. Date: 01 August, 1984 List Price(USD): $4.50 |
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Title: Wealth of Nations (Great Minds Series) by Adam Smith ISBN: 0879757051 Publisher: Prometheus Books Pub. Date: December, 1991 List Price(USD): $11.00 |
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Title: The Wealth of Nations by Alan B. Krueger, Adam Smith ISBN: 0553585975 Publisher: Bantam Pub. Date: 04 March, 2003 List Price(USD): $7.95 |
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Title: The Republic by Plato ISBN: 0486411214 Publisher: Dover Pubns Pub. Date: 18 April, 2000 List Price(USD): $2.50 |
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Title: Capital: A Critique of Political Economy (Penguin Classics) by Karl Marx, Ben Fowkes, J. M. Cohen ISBN: 0140445684 Publisher: Penguin USA (Paper) Pub. Date: May, 1992 List Price(USD): $16.95 |
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