Unpacking modern Marxism, for those who've ever felt "done over" and/or would 
like to get a handle on some tools to turn the tables:

   Exposing The Challenge Of Marxism
   Yoram Hazony via Quillette.com,
   https://quillette.com/2020/08/16/the-challenge-of-marxism/
   https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/exposing-challenge-marxism

      … IV. The flaws that make Marxism fatal

      … while Marxism proposes an empirical investigation of the power 
relations among classes or groups, it simply assumes that wherever one 
discovers a relationship between a more powerful group and a weaker one, that 
relation will be one of oppressor and oppressed. This makes it seem as if every 
hierarchical relationship is just another version of the horrific exploitation 
of black slaves by Virginia plantation owners before the Civil War. But in most 
cases, hierarchical relationships are not enslavement. Thus, while it is true 
that kings have normally been more powerful than their subjects, employers more 
powerful than their employees, and parents more powerful than their children, 
these have not necessarily been straightforward relations of oppressor and 
oppressed. Much more common are mixed relationships, in which both the stronger 
and the weaker receive certain benefits, and in which both can also point to 
hardships that must be endured in order to maintain it.

      The fact that the Marxist framework presupposes a relationship of 
oppressor and oppressed leads to the second great difficulty, which is the 
assumption that every society is so exploitative that it must be heading toward 
the overthrow of the dominant class or group. But if it is possible for weaker 
groups to benefit from their position, and not just to be oppressed by it, then 
we have arrived at the possibility of a conservative society: One in which 
there is a dominant class or loyalty group (or coalition of groups), which 
seeks to balance the benefits and the burdens of the existing order so as to 
avoid actual oppression. In such a case, the overthrow and destruction of the 
dominant group may not be necessary. Indeed, when considering the likely 
consequences of a revolutionary reconstitution of society—often including not 
only civil war, but foreign invasion as the political order collapses—most 
groups in a conservative society may well prefer to preserve the existing 
order, or to largely preserve it, rather than to endure Marx’s alternative.

      This brings us to the third failing of the Marxist framework. This is the 
notorious absence of a clear view as to what the underclass, having overthrown 
its oppressors and seized the state, is supposed to do with its newfound power. 
Marx is emphatic that once they have control of the state, the oppressed 
classes will be able to end oppression. But these claims appear to be 
unfounded. After all, we’ve said that the strength of the Marxist framework 
lies in its willingness to recognize that power relations do exist among 
classes and groups in every society, and that these can be oppressive and 
exploitative in every society. And if this is an empirical fact—as indeed it 
seems to be—then how will the Marxists who have overthrown liberalism be able 
use the state to obtain the total abolition of class antagonisms? At this 
point, Marx’s empiricist posture evaporates, and his framework becomes 
completely utopian.

      When liberals and conservatives talk about Marxism being “nothing but a 
big lie,” this is what they mean. The Marxist goal of seizing the state and 
using it to eliminate all oppression is an empty promise. Marx did not know how 
the state could actually bring this about, and neither have any of his 
followers. In fact, we now have many historical cases in which Marxists have 
seized the state: In Russia and Eastern Europe, China, North Korea, and 
Cambodia, Cuba and Venezuela. But nowhere has the Marxists’ attempt at a 
“revolutionary reconstitution of society” by the state been anything other than 
a parade of horrors. In every case, the Marxists themselves form a new class or 
group, using the power of the state to exploit and oppress other classes in the 
most extreme ways—up to and including repeated recourse to murdering millions 
of their own people. Yet for all this, utopia never comes and oppression never 
ends.

      Marxist society, like all other societies, consists of classes and groups 
arranged in a hierarchical order. But the aim of reconstituting society and the 
assertion that the state is responsible for achieving this feat makes the 
Marxist state much more aggressive, and more willing to resort to coercion and 
bloodshed, than the liberal regime it seeks to replace.

      ...

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