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Marxism Unmasked from Delusion to Destruction.pdf 7471KB

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NATIONALISM. SOCIALISM. AND VIOLENT REVOLUTl<br />

He said wir—i.e.. rrvoluaon. by which he meant civil war—was necessary.<br />

Mot was Friednch Engek a paafist; he studied military science day in and<br />

day out in order <strong>to</strong> prepare himself for the position he had assigned himself<br />

i* cofiunander-m-chief of all naaons. as commander-in-chief for the<br />

proleunam of all countries umted. Remember that he participated in fox<br />

hunting in a red coat, which he <strong>to</strong>ld Marx this was the best exercise for a<br />

future general.<br />

Because o( ihis idea of rrvoluoon—civil war. not international war<br />

the Manaan international began <strong>to</strong> discuss peace. In 1864 Marx founded<br />

in London the First International A group of persons who had very little<br />

i«) do with the people and the mas*e% met <strong>to</strong>gether. There was a secretary<br />

f«>r every counirs* Jhc secrrurv* for Italy ums Friedrich Engels and many<br />

of the ocher countrie* u-rrr rrprrvrnicd b>' persons who only knew the<br />

t(>unirir« thes* rrproentcd a* <strong>to</strong>uri%t« Arguments between the members<br />

ihsrupied the whole Inieriuiional. Finally it was moved <strong>to</strong> the United<br />

Sutcs and then fell »\*xt\ in 1K76.<br />

The Second Internatioiul \%*a% formed in Paris in 1869. But this<br />

Second International duln'i kmns- what (o deal with. The unions had<br />

jfisen and the uniom v^rrr oppon-d <strong>to</strong> free trade and free migration.<br />

Under such c ondituim, htns i ould \xni find subjects <strong>to</strong> be discussed at an<br />

iniemaiiotul congrrs*' Ilien the\- decided <strong>to</strong> discuss peace and war, but<br />

only on a natioiul lesrl I1ie\- uid the>' \srre all proletarians and they<br />

4gnred lhey wouUI %\c\Tt fight the war* of the bourgeoisie. The Germans<br />

nicluded Kngrls and Karl Kaui%kv There wrre some "bad" Frenchmen in<br />

the group who asketl. Wlut do >x»u mean when you say we can't defend<br />

our ovk^i country' We ilt»n'i like the Hohcn7ollcrns."The French at this<br />

tune made an agreement with the Russians and the (lermans didn't like<br />

that. Every fe^*' years their was such an international congress and each<br />

time the neu-spapers vaid it heralded the end of war. But these "nice<br />

fellows" didn't diuruss the real cau*e\ of friction, migration barriers, etc.<br />

The outbreak ofWt»rld War I disrupted the International C.ongresses.<br />

What Marx planned was a re\tilution But what really happened was<br />

that he created a burrauiratu organization m the European countries<br />

which was. K* and large. mniH ent because it lacked the power <strong>to</strong> execute<br />

its theories. Then there desrloped m the East a Communist organization<br />

that unfortunately has the p- a iiun. who was not in this regard a man of action,<br />

but who %%-as able <strong>to</strong> bring about violent action. It was the timid bourgeois<br />

3-S<br />

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