u/asdfguy17 - originally from r/GenZhou

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    3 years ago

    u/aimixin - originally from r/GenZhou
    He is correct. Mao’s focus on “unrelenting class struggle” was incorrect and destructive.

    After a communist party takes power, if all they focus on is class struggle, they will completely destroy all elements of the bourgeoisie in a short period of time, and fully abolish private property.

    This idea sounds great emotionally. The idea of quickly achieving a fully public economy, the complete and unrelenting destruction of the bourgeoisie, both big and petty, for national and foreign, etc. This all sounds good emotionally. But in practice, it makes no sense.

    If you simply kill enough people to reach socialism, you are pretty much rejecting Marx’s entire concept of historical materialism and viewing economic systems as something that can simply be implemented by government fiat, and rejecting the idea that one economic system develops out of the other. You can’t just implement socialism by fiat or by killing enough people. You have to develop towards it.

    Trying to construct a fully planned economy through government fiat is a rejection of Marxian theory of social development and would inevitably lead you to implement an economic system that would be fundamentally impossible from Marx’s own analysis, you would be implementing full planning simply by fiat without ever developing the material basis for it. This would be an inevitable outcome of focusing purely on unrelenting class struggle.

    The relentless destruction of all non-proletarian classes would inevitably lead you to construct an economy that is economically impossible and would be filled with internal contradictions and bound to collapse in the long-term. A communist party can only transform society gradually alongside rapid economic development.

    “Will it be possible for private property to be abolished at one stroke? No, no more than existing forces of production can at one stroke be multiplied to the extent necessary for the creation of a communal society. In all probability, the proletarian revolution will transform existing society gradually and will be able to abolish private property only when the means of production are available in sufficient quantity.”

    -– Friedrich Engels, “The Principles of Communism”

    If it can only transform society gradually, this implies that private property must also continue to exist for some time. This makes sense from a classical understanding of Marxism because you cannot abolish it by fiat, the conditions for the abolition of private property are not implemented by government fiat but are formed by the development of markets themselves as markets have a tendency to socialize/centralize as they develop.

    Hence, the communist party can’t simply go out and abolish all private property. It has to primarily focus on developing the country as rapidly as possible, and can only abolish private property “by degree” alongside this rapid development.

    “The proletariat will use its political supremacy to wrest, by degree, all capital from the bourgeoisie, to centralise all instruments of production in the hands of the State, i.e., of the proletariat organised as the ruling class; and to increase the total productive forces as rapidly as possible.”

    -– Marx & Engels, “Manifesto of the Communist Party”

    While the idea of completely destroying the bourgeoisie in unrelenting class struggle sounds good emotionally, in practice it is nonsense. You have to develop the economy, and private property remains a part of the economy for a long time. Simply destroying even the national petty bourgeoisie just because of “muh class struggle” does not help you develop your economy. It is in fact destructive to your own economy.

    The harsh pill which many Marxists refuse to swallow because of their “unrelenting class struggle” dogma is that the communist party will be forced to work with some elements of the bourgeoisie in order to develop its economy. Not all elements of course, but at least some, because private property inherently cannot be abolished in one stroke but requires material development.

    “Due to the hasty and early entry into socialism, we didn’t accumulate enough experience to enable us to have a very clear understanding on the issues of social development. Throughout the ‘Great Leap Forward’ and the People’s Commune Movement in 1958, there had occurred a blind optimism of targeting ‘the realization of communism in our country, which is no longer a distant future’, and thus made a serious and erroneous estimation on the development stages of socialism….As Deng Xiaoping pointed out: As early as the second half of 1957 we began to make ‘Left’ mistakes. To put it briefly, we pursued a closed-door policy in foreign affairs and took class struggle as the central task at home no attempt was made to expand the productive forces, and the policies we formulated were too ambitious for the primary stage of socialism. After the 3rd Plenary Session of the Party, after the comparison of our both positive and negative experiences, the Chinese Communist Party has gradually made a scientific conclusion that China is in and will be in the Primary stage of socialism.”

    — Xu Hongzhi & Qin Xuan, Basics of the Theoretical System of Socialism with Chinese Characteristics

    While class struggle is still important to communist parties, it is only of primary importance before they take power. After they take power, it cannot be their primary focus. Their primary focus has to be to achieve communism. The communist party is already in power, they can already expropriate private property at will, and we saw this for example during COVID when they expropriated the PPE manufacturers. So the primary thing preventing China from becoming a fully planned economy is not the bourgeoisie. It is underdevelopment.

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        3 years ago

        u/aimixin - originally from r/GenZhou
        Thanks I’ll read that later.

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      3 years ago

      u/MakersEye - originally from r/GenZhou
      Ok but how would this ostensibly sound argument look any different to China’s leaders retconning their variation/evolution of SWCC to be read in line with an understanding of Marxism, in order to simply justify their actions? Feels like a bait and switch with dogma to say our reforms are marxister than thou? I’m not advocating classicide btw.

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        3 years ago

        u/aimixin - originally from r/GenZhou
        Marxism is a scientific theory of societal development, not a dogma. Insisting that we should abandon all theories of social development and that we can get to socialism just by believing hard enough and if they don’t believe, we can purge unbelievers in a Cultural Revolution, that is dogma.

        Saying that economic planning develops naturally out of the socialization of markets over a long period of time is not dogma. Marx wrote an extensive economic analysis that is still to this day the third most cited economic work in academia of all time. You don’t get published works cited that much by being “dogmatic”.

        The overwhelming amount of evidence and data only consistently proves Marx’s predictions here were right. There is no market economy on the planet that has not had a gradual declination in the proportion of small business to large businesses over time as the economy develops. This is a universal trend.

        You can’t just dismiss the overwhelming evidence by saying this is a “dogma”. You have to actually present evidence against it. You have to provide arguments against Marx’s theoretical explanations for why this trend occurs in Capital and then you have to give your own theoretical explanation to what you think is the actual cause for this trend.

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          3 years ago

          u/MakersEye - originally from r/GenZhou
          Understood. Please believe I’m not being intentionally antagonistic. I only wish to understand.

          I’m your opinion then does China have the balance near enough right for this moment in history, in terms of “class struggle”? It doesn’t appear so to me, but I’m not that knowledgeable to make a proper judgement. Do you think in the clip above Xi is also acknowledging there is work to be done there, or evading it? It seems straight-forwardly self-congratulatory - but naturally there is a time and place for that too, if achievement warrants it. I’m not sure of the nature of the occasion at which the speech was delivered.

          P.S. I wasn’t intending to conflate Marxism with dogma, but rather to question whether or not CCP has perhaps fabricated and injected it’s own dogma into it’s foundational theories, thereby corrupting them effectively, as a self justifying enterprise (i.e. I associate my actions with the theories of Marxism, giving them them both credibility and invulnerability?)

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            3 years ago

            u/aimixin - originally from r/GenZhou
            If you want to claim the CPC is inserting dogma into Marxism, then you need to demonstrate that, but what the CPC is saying is clearly more inline with classical Marxism than the Maoist interpretation. The video link even states “Xi Jinping Rejects Mao Zedong Thought on Class Struggle”, which naturally leads me to assume the uploader of the video is posting this because he thinks the CPC should return to Maoist economics, which are more of a deviation from classical Marxism than Deng Xiaoping Theory.

            Your point about whether or not they have a good “balance” I do think is a much more reasonable question to ask. But you should not base the view over whether or not they have this good “balance” on this single 1 minute and 12 second clip.

            This clip doesn’t even really address that, it is talking about past developments from Mao to Deng, so you can’t really extrapolate anything from this clip about whether or not they have a good balance or not today since that is a separate question entirely from what this video even discusses.

            Whether or not CPC is doing a good job keeping the bourgeoisie under control or whether or not the bourgeoisie is gaining ground in controlling the CPC, or whether or not they already control the CPC, is a more complex discussion than whether or not there should be a bourgeoisie allowed at all that can be worked with.

            It is hard to know what is going on inside of the CPC as an outsider exactly. I base some of my views on economic indicators. If the bourgeoisie was in control, wealth inequality would be growing and not shrinking, its enormous list of policies for poverty alleviation and reducing the wealth gap would not be there, it would eventually begin to stagnate like we’ve seen in most every western country and Japan rather than investing heavily into new technology and infrastructure, there would be attempts to mass privatize the public sector but Xi Jinping has only been trying to strengthen the public sector, there would be a declination in social spending and not an increase in spending as a percentage of GDP every single year consistently, etc.

            So I do view that currently the bourgeoisie is not in power. Of course, whether or not the bourgeoisie is in power is a different question and an entirely different discussion from whether or not they are gaining ground and could be in power in the long-run.

            I don’t think I really have enough expertise on answering that particular question. Someone who has more knowledge on policies they have implemented to prevent that could probably have a better discussion with you on that particular point.

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              3 years ago

              u/MakersEye - originally from r/GenZhou
              Thank you for your thoughtful and detailed answers.

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          3 years ago

          u/Lenins2ndCat - originally from r/GenZhou

          Marxism is a scientific theory of societal development, not a dogma. Insisting that we should abandon all theories of social development and that we can get to socialism just by believing hard enough and if they don’t believe, we can purge unbelievers in a Cultural Revolution, that is dogma.

          I think you are being a little dogmatic comrade.

          One aspect of this I would argue is that historical materialism explains how contradictions of hierarchy rewrite society through revolution over and over again until the contradictions are eliminated.

          This however does not mean that all societies must start as some feudal monarchy and evolve through all stages of societal development in order to reach capitalism. By the same token, all societies do not need to start at the beginning in order to reach socialism.

          People that already know what they are developing can skip straight to the system they intend to implement, with some degree of tightening the belt in-between due to resources. The fact that they skipped straight to their intended system does not guarantee failure of those societies at all and by the same token I don’t think you should hold to the idea that you must absolutely force yourself through stages before you’ll reach your intended target.

          I see historical materialism as the natural process by which contradiction resolves itself through class struggle over and over again, driving forwards reorganisation of society. This natural process will inevitably reach socialism if given a long enough timeline to play out, but that does not mean that you can not proceed with intent just as any society could be started on Mars tomorrow with the intent of being capitalist.

          Just to add – this isn’t a refutation of the Chinese approach. I support what they’re doing as it’s necessary in the current conditions to prevent isolation and destruction by the bourgeoisie. I just don’t think it’s right to say that any stages are requirements.

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            3 years ago

            u/aimixin - originally from r/GenZhou

            I think you are being a little dogmatic comrade.

            You think I’m going to respond positively when you legitimately start off calling me dogmatic for criticizing the huge side of leftists who think material conditions aren’t relevant?

            One aspect of this I would argue is that historical materialism explains how contradictions of hierarchy rewrite society through revolution over and over again until the contradictions are eliminated.

            The “hierarchies” result from the relations of production, which are determined by the productive forces. Not the other way around.

            “…social relations between the producers, and the conditions under which they exchange their activities and share in the total act of production, will naturally vary according to the character of the means of production. With the discover of a new instrument of warfare, the firearm, the whole internal organization of the army was necessarily altered, the relations within which individuals compose an army and can work as an army were transformed, and the relation of different armies to another was likewise changed.

            We thus see that the social relations within which individuals produce, the social relations of production, are altered, transformed, with the change and development of the material means of production, of the forces of production. The relations of production in their totality constitute what is called the social relations, society, and, moreover, a society at a definite stage of historical development, a society with peculiar, distinctive characteristics. Ancient society, feudal society, bourgeois (or capitalist) society, are such totalities of relations of production, each of which denotes a particular stage of development in the history of mankind.”

            — Karl Marx, “Wage-Labour and Capital”

            .

            This however does not mean that all societies must start as some feudal monarchy and evolve through all stages of societal development in order to reach capitalism. By the same token, all societies do not need to start at the beginning in order to reach socialism.

            People that already know what they are developing can skip straight to the system they intend to implement, with some degree of tightening the belt in-between due to resources. The fact that they skipped straight to their intended system does not guarantee failure of those societies at all and by the same token I don’t think you should hold to the idea that you must absolutely force yourself through stages before you’ll reach your intended target.

            While it is technically true that it would not violate the laws of physics for someone to win a war using incredibly outdated battle tactics not actually suited for modern day weaponry, it would not only be an incredibly inefficient of winning that war but they significantly increase their likelihood of losing.

            I see historical materialism as the natural process by which contradiction resolves itself through class struggle over and over again, driving forwards reorganisation of society. This natural process will inevitably reach socialism if given a long enough timeline to play out, but that does not mean that you can not proceed with intent just as any society could be started on Mars tomorrow with the intent of being capitalist.

            This is not what historical materialism is.

            Historical materialism comes back to the material. The class struggle originates in contradictory relations of production, but the relations of production originate in the level of the productive forces.

            Class struggle does not develop into anything if it is static. Marx’s entire purpose of writing Capital was to analyze how the development of the productive forces in capitalism leads to changes in the relations of production.

            The development of capitalism socializes production, brings workers out of competition and into cooperation, lays the infrastructure for central planning, and constantly reduces the number of capitalists will constantly increasing the number of workers.

            Hence, the relations of production inevitably change as a process of the development of the productive forces in a way that is constantly giving workers a stronger position, so eventually it will topple over for the workers.

            But that does not mean you can just implement socialism by decree “if you know what you are doing”. Why is it all you extreme dogmatists who never read a word on historical materialism come here pretending to be experts and saying everyone who disagrees must be the “dogmatist”?

            You have an idealist view of economics where the economic system is simply a reflection of human ideas and not based in material conditions, and therefore in your mind, you conclude that the most developed economic system is merely a reflection of the most developed ideas, hence you state this quite blatantly, “People that already know what they are developing can skip straight to the system they intend to implement”.

            To you, having the knowledge of the system is enough. Just having the most developed ideas is enough. When this is quite literally the opposite of what Marx argues. Economic systems are not a reflection of a certain level of development in human ideas. It is the opposite. Human ideas are a reflection of a certain level of development of the economic system.

            “we do not set out from what men say, imagine, conceive, nor from men as narrated, thought of, imagined, conceived, in order to arrive at men in the flesh. We set out from real, active men, and on the basis of their real life-process we demonstrate the development of the ideological reflexes and echoes of this life-process. The phantoms formed in the human brain are also, necessarily, sublimates of their material life-process, which is empirically verifiable and bound to material premises. Morality, religion, metaphysics, all the rest of ideology and their corresponding forms of consciousness, thus no longer retain the semblance of independence. They have no history, no development; but men, developing their material production and their material intercourse, alter, along with this their real existence, their thinking and the products of their thinking. Life is not determined by consciousness, but consciousness by life.”

            — Karl Marx, “The German Ideology"

            “In the social production of their existence, men inevitably enter into definite relations, which are independent of their will, namely relations of production appropriate to a given stage in the development of their material forces of production. The totality of these relations of production constitutes the economic structure of society, the real foundation, on which arises a legal and political superstructure and to which correspond definite forms of social consciousness. The mode of production of material life conditions the general process of social, political and intellectual life. It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness.”

            — Karl Marx, “A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy”

            You have no understanding of this topic at all. Historical materialism is not simply about “hierarchies” contradicting therefore making socialism “inevitable”. It is about the material basis of society ultimately and in the last instance determining the superstructure of society.

            Just to add – this isn’t a refutation of the Chinese approach. I support what they’re doing as it’s necessary in the current conditions to prevent isolation and destruction by the bourgeoisie. I just don’t think it’s right to say that any stages are requirements.

            You objectively could not have implemented a feudal economy in primitive hunter-gatherer times. You objectively could not have simply implemented capitalism by fiat in early feudal times. You could not even have abolished slavery by fiat in early ancient times. This required certain technological innovations to improve agricultural production, such as the spinning jenny. These were things that required a certain level of development of the productive forces.

            “it is only possible to achieve real liberation in the real world and by employing real means, that slavery cannot be abolished without the steam-engine and the mule and spinning-jenny, serfdom cannot be abolished without improved agriculture, and that, in general, people cannot be liberated as long as they are unable to obtain food and drink, housing and clothing in adequate quality and quantity. ‘Liberation’ is an historical and not a mental act, and it is brought about by historical conditions, the development of industry, commerce, agriculture, the conditions of intercourse.”

            — Karl Marx, “The German Ideology"

            You say you can just ignore the level of development of the productive forces and implement whatever system you want willy-nilly as long as you “you know what you are doing”.

            Let’s take a look at what Friedrich Engels had to say about ancient slave-based societies.

            “It was slavery that first made possible the division of labour between agriculture and industry on a larger scale, and thereby also Hellenism, the flowering of the ancient world. Without slavery, no Greek state, no Greek art and science, without slavery, no Roman Empire. But without the basis laid by Hellenism and the Roman Empire, also no modern Europe…In this sense we are entitled to say: Without the slavery of antiquity no modern socialism. It is very easy to inveigh against slavery and similar things in general terms, and to give vent to high moral indignation at such infamies. Unfortunately all that this conveys is only what everyone knows, namely, that these institutions of antiquity are no longer in accord with our present conditions and our sentiments, which these conditions determine.”

            — Friedrich Engels, “Anti-Durhing”

            Was Engels a dogmatist?

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              3 years ago

              u/Lenins2ndCat - originally from r/GenZhou
              Ok so, I agree with some parts of this and disagree with others but I’d rather come at this from an angle that doesn’t put us in combat with one another because I don’t think that’s particularly productive, especially on reddit.

              Let’s assume humans are starting a new colony on Mars but they’re starting from a point of limited resources. Let’s say they’re starting without any tools at all for the sake of argument. Given what we understand about production, society and development how do you picture this playing out? Do you expect feudal society to develop? If you don’t, why?

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                u/aimixin - originally from r/GenZhou
                Feudalism would not develop on Mars because the material conditions of an early Martian society would be nothing like the material conditions of an early feudal society.

                Under feudalism, countries were very big, yet the government was very weak, what Adam Smith described as “feudal anarchy”. The king was only the largest baron of many, who he had very limited control over and would constantly war with each other.

                Feudal peasants were also self-sufficient. The king did not need to control them. They could grow food on their own land and maintain themselves, even if isolated from everyone else. The king mainly would just provide some level of protection when possible and collect taxes in kind.

                Feudal society was also based in very limited agriculture. Technology beyond agriculture was also very limited, most things were built from the ground-up by hand by people who specialized in it in guilds. You did not get your swords from a sword factory, but from a swordsmith, who made it himself.

                A Martian colony would require an incredibly high level of economic development to even begin to implement since so much tech will be required to get humans not to die on Mars. These colonies would start out incredibly small so that they could be tightly controlled, quite the opposite of feudal anarchy. Nobody could be self-sufficient, there would be no clean air, clean water, food, clothing, etc, without people specifically creating them, because none of this appears naturally on Mars, unlike on earth. These colonies could eventually expand in size, but only as far as you could carefully plan every operation of that expansion and scale up the technology.

                A Martian colony would be similar to the inside of the International Space Station. It would necessarily have to be carefully planned down to every single small detail or else everyone dies. The colony could only scale in size in proportion to an expansion of the technology and planning. It would also be too limited to be a democratically planned economy, it would necessarily have to be a technocratically planned economy, because the slightest slip-up and everyone dies.

                I’m not sure you can compare a Mars colony to early human society or even to something like the British colonies in North America. The material conditions are quite clearly wildly different and the idea they’d form the same superstructure is incredibly far-fetched.

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                  3 years ago

                  u/Lenins2ndCat - originally from r/GenZhou
                  Ok so the planet is a poor comparison. I should use a peer planet instead. Earth 2.0 if you like.

                  Let’s say that a colony ship arrives at Earth 2.0 and instead of being able to develop it with resources taken on the colony ship they have to start from scratch. No tools no nothing.

                  These humans will still skip several stages of development because they will seek to industrialise as quickly as they can. Right? They’re not going to go through the same limiting factors of the stone/bronze/iron-ages or subsequent industrial revolutions. They’re going to jump as far ahead as they possibly can based on existing available resources.

                  My point doesn’t have to rely on idealism. Human knowledge, not ideas but factual-knowledge of science, industry and production is a material thing, not an idealist thing. Humans today have knowledge of industry, science and production that humans of the past did not. Developing that knowledge base was a limiting factor in production and the material conditions.

                  What I’m trying to get to is that if you take humans from today and plonk them in resource-less earth-like conditions they are going to jump ahead to the technology and production-level that they know. That their knowledge-base is a material factor. That they will immediately aim to build the society they know of and using the technology and production methods they know underpin that society.

                  By the same token, let’s say 300 years from now in a truly socialist earth, the humans then will have knowledge of science and production we do not right now. If you take those humans and plop them on a foreign planet without resources, they are going to immediately seek to build up to the productive point that they know. They will skip ahead because their knowledge of technology, logistics and production is a material factor that shouldn’t be dismissed.

                  On the other hand, if all you have are skill less humans with very poor political, scientific and social education? The result is probably going to be deteriorate into much older versions of society as these humans will be forced to regress to older methods with no idea how to build ahead again.

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        3 years ago

        u/MisterBobsonDugnutt - originally from r/GenZhou
        This, I think, resembles a kind of faulty reasoning imo. Please don’t take this as a personal attack but I see this flawed reasoning manifest in a parallel way elsewhere.

        Take Jack Ma and Jimmy Lai.

        They both have been slapped down by the Chinese government. In Jimmy Lai’s case, he has been arrested and is being investigated for money laundering and other things.

        Now, a typical westerner reading of the situation will go: Jimmy Lai annoyed the CPC and so they will do what they always do as an authoritarian government - they will fabricate the evidence and then they will put him through a kangaroo court and lock him up for life.

        So this begs the question - why was it that a year ago Jimmy Lai was calling for foreign intervention and “more CIA” intervention into Hong Kong and demanding secession of HK but he wasn’t immediately thrown into prison the next day or the next week?

        If the Chinese government can just stomp someone down with falsified evidence and a rigged court system then why would they let him continue to spread this message in the mainstream media?

        Same for Jack Ma - if he was violating Chinese law and regulatory bodies, why didn’t they just get rid of his inconvenience and throw him away on some bogus charge immediately?

        In a similar way, why would the Chinese government feel it necessary to provide all of these ideological justifications for their current trajectory?

        It’s very easy to see how ideas of liberty and justice for all can so quickly and completely become rationalizations for imperialism and an incredibly extensive surveillance-carceral complex. (To my knowledge) there aren’t any scholars working on developing philosophical justifications for why a country founded on the right to privacy should permit and support dragnet surveillance of all electronic communication. I mean, there must be some clowns who go through a routine of mental gymnastics on Fox News or what have you - the Dinesh D’souza types - but they are mere spectacle and there is nothing but the intentional perversion of facts and history and scholarship going on there.

        If it’s so easy to take this path then why would China be going to all this effort at all? Are the Chinese masses truly this revolutionary in spirit and education that they must be duped into thinking that SWCC is socialist? I struggle to believe the the Chinese people have been so thoroughly and completely propagandized and educated to be like this - I suspect that most of them have at least a moderate degree of petit-bourgeois mentality tbh. And if this is the case then why don’t they just erode the education and shift the propaganda away from a socialist orientation?

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    3 years ago

    u/King-Sassafrass - originally from r/GenZhou
    He’s basically saying “we need to understand what the underlying issues are that Mao was doing in science and advancements and such, so that we can understand why we’re doing these reforms in the first place”

    We’re looking to the past for problems so we can understand necessary steps to solve these problems. If you reject it and say “there’s no problems at all!” Then they’re going to snowball and get bigger until reality hits you in the face

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    3 years ago

    u/maenlsm - originally from r/GenZhou
    The communist society in Marx’s prediction would be a classless rich society. In Mao’s idea, he would rather have a poor classless society than any classed society (in reality though Mao didn’t live like the poorest peasant). Pol Pot took it to a new level – he basically made every Cambodian a poor peasant and abolished money outright (Pol Pot actually lived in jungles even after the CPK had taken the state power for a while). On the other hand, Deng once said bluntly: “poverty is not socialism.” Chinese leaders since Deng follow this doctrine: a certain level of inequality is acceptable in order to develop productive forces.

    Now you choose which path you want to follow.