REJECTIONS OF LIBERALISM: 20TH CENTURY
A. Totalitarianism
· Seeks complete control over every aspect of the people’s lives – both public and private
· Hierarchy
· Single political party
· One leader (or small group of elite)
· Radical: (Soviet Union) move towards the far left side of the economic spectrum (equality, classless society) and complete rejection of the traditions of the past
· Reactionary (Nazi Germany – Fascism): move toward an idealized past and an acceptance of economic inequality (some are naturally better than others)
· As an ideology, it used all the elements (past, present, future) to target the needs/desires of the people
o Also used: propaganda, coercive power, strict control of citizens
o Conformity (and acceptance of beliefs) were achieved using:
§ Secret police and terror
§ Youth groups and other organizations to promote the ideals
§ Extensive organization: locally, regionally, nationally
§ Indoctrination (education)
§ Censorship
§ Redirecting popular discontent (scapegoats) – more extensively used in Nazism
· Attempted, at all costs, to hold off/reject the values in Liberalism and the worth of the individual
B. Communism vs. Nazism: Theory and Practise
· Nazi Germany and Communist Russia, although both using totalitarian ideas, were very different in their ideologies and beliefs about human nature
· Fascism – supports totalitarian government
· World is divided into good and evil with nothing in between
· Nation must work together for common and spiritual goals – individually they cannot survive
· Need a strong leader (dictator) to achieve this
· Similarities
· Dictatorship
· Both often arise when democratic gov’ts fail (Mussolini) – crisis theory
· Leader is the bearer of collective good
· Differences
· Communism – people are rational (Rousseau), Fascism – people are irrational (Hobbes)
· Communism – uses reason to motivate people, accept technology and science as a means to building the future
· Fascism – emotions, hate, rejects reason and science and looks to the past for its model
C. Karl Marx
· Developed his political and economic ideals that attempted to provide an overall philosophy of life
· Wrote Communist Manifesto (with Fredrich Engels) and Das Kapital
· The story of humanity was a history of class conflict between the owners of the means of production and the workers
· All aspects of life are determined by how you are related to the means of production (owner, worker)
· Believed that the Industrial Revolution caused inhumane treatment of the lower class or workers
· Created 2 classes of society
· 1. Proletariat – workers
· Exploited
· 2. Bourgeoisie – ruling class
· Exploiters
· Selfish, owned the courts, police, media, government
· Believed that the proletariat should rise up in revolt against the ruling class to create ONE class (equality)
Karl Marx – view on Capitalism
· Central feature of capitalist system was that workers must “sell” their labour to those who owned the means of production
· Bourgeoisie became wealthy because they didn’t pass the profits onto the workers
· Condemned the profit motive and private property – caused conflict between the classes
· It exploited and degraded workers
· Prevented humanity from achieving its potential - humans are creative and capitalism doesn’t allow for this to be fostered
· Lead to economic depression, imperialism (taking of land), wars, and revolution by the proletariat
Karl Marx – Role of Government
· One class, dictatorship of the proletariat
· The state would have:
· Central planning, increase production, equality (distribution, economically), work for society
· “from each according to his ability to each according to his need” – motto
· after transition period
· crime/poverty would stop, state would “wither away” (bourgeoisie power – not in structure)
· Pure Communism
· No capitalism
· Would work because you wanted to work – to better society
· No need for a formal government structure with no more ruling class – live in a voluntary and cooperative society
· Lenin – used Marx ideas to rise the peasants up in revolt against the Tsars in Russia – Russian Revolution of 1917
USSR: UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS
A. The Russian Revolution: 1917
· Marxist theory: Russia was an unlikely place for revolution because it was only in the process of industrialization and had not completed it
· Tsars (before 1917) and Russian Government was authoritarian, inefficient, and repressive
o problems that sparked revolution
§ only in beginning stages of industrialization - poor working/living conditions, low standard of living, poor economy
§ famine
§ WWI - hundreds of thousands of lives lost, starvation of people and soldiers, soldiers poorly trained and equipped, continued to fight for 3 years of war
§ High food prices, rising inflation, striking workers, many soldiers deserted army and/or would not stop protestors
· Lenin and Bolsheviks promised “peace, land and bread”
o made peace with Germany in WWI - Brest-Litovsik Treaty
o crushed civil war in Russia in 1918 to take control
o 1921-founded 1st communist party in Russia
§ Lenin is considered “Father of Communism”
· 1922 - Union Of Soviet Socialists Republics formed (USSR)
B. STALIN
· ruled 1927-1953
**made Russia the second most powerful nation
· most successful dictatorship:
TOTALITARIANISM: using terror, force and propaganda to control all aspects of peoples’ lives and all aspects of country
· greatest achievement: rapid industrial development of Soviet Union (SU)
· to industrialize, SU needed control of 3 factors of production - land, labor, capital
· In 1928, Russia had:
· Increasing population (labor)
· Abundant amount of resources (cotton, minerals, oil, gas, lumber etc.)(land)
· Russia did not have the money to industrialize – Stalin needed to find the money to do complete industrialization (no capital)
· with goal of increasing standard of living of people
· believed capitalist powers would try to crush SU - developed and strengthen military/control
Stalin’s 5 year plans:
· He created five 5 year plans dating 1928-1953 in order to industrialize his country
· The Third plan was interrupted by WWII – concentrated on the war effort instead
· The Fifth plan was stopped by his death
Main goals of his 5 year plans
· Build up heavy industry –
· steel, coal, machinery, production of weapons
· changed to oil, air crafts, chemical
· came at the expense of consumer goods – no choice, very few products for everyday life were created
· standard of living fell – especially for farmers
· Collectivization of Farms (collectives)
· Peasant farmers had to give all production to the state
· Tried to rebel - were quickly stopped/killed
· Execution/exiling of all “enemies of the state/people”
· Anyone opposed to his rule
· As well, Millions of peasants were dying from starvation
· Fall in standard of living – hunger, fear, rising prices of goods
· Defended country from Western Capitalists and created a strong state by controlling and owning all means of production
****Note that during this time, Europe was being lead by 3 of the world’s most notorious leaders: Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini
Centrally Planned Economy - Theory
· Also called: Command economy, planned economy
· Public or state ownership of all factors/means of production
· Based on Socialism – governments owns all ‘for the people’ – to create more equality
· 2 main types:
· Democratic Socialism – Sweden – free elections, some individual rights, profit motive, but gov’t ownership of key industries and high taxes
· Communist system – total public ownership, no democratic rights
Centrally Planned Economy – Key Characteristics:
· Collective Property
· Property is owned by an entire group of people (gov’t), not individual
· Cooperation –
· Collectivism – produce and distribute goods together
· Group Incentive
· Incentive refers to planning which offers the group a reward, not the individual
· Central Planning –
· Committee of economic experts (elected or not) makes all economic decisions
· Either the government themselves or a group acting on behalf of the government
· Government answers the economic questions - employment, who gets goods/what to produce rather than supply and demand
· Must consider scarcity of resources (natural and human)