Lenin stood for state capitalism and argued that socialist democracy is in
no way inconsistent with the rule and dictatorship of one person. Was
Lenin a Marxist? 

Marx and his co-worker, Engels, consistently argued that socialism (or
communism, they used the terms interchangeably) could only evolve out of
the political and economic circumstances created by a fully developed
capitalism. 

In other words, production would have to be expanded within capitalism to
a point where the potential existed to allow for "each [to take] according
to their needs". In turn, this objective condition would have created the
basis for a socialist-conscious majority willing to contribute their
physical and mental skills voluntarily in the production and distribution
of society's needs.

With the extension of the suffrage, Marx claimed (in 1872) that the
workers might now achieve power in the leading countries of capitalism by
peaceful means. Given the fact that socialism will be based on the widest
possible human co-operation, it need hardly be said that Marx consistently
emphasised that its achievement had to be the work of a majority.

Again, given their understanding of the nature of socialist society, Marx
and Engels saw socialism essentially in world terms: a global alternative
to the system of global capitalism.

In the very first sentence of his monumental work, Capital, Marx wrote
that "the wealth of those societies in which the capitalist mode of
production prevails presents itself as a vast accumulation of
commodities". He then went on to define the nature of a commodity in
economic terms as an item of real or imagined wealth produced for sale on
the market with a view to profit.

Marx claimed the wages system was the quintessential instrument of
capitalist exploitation of the working class. He urged workers to remove
from their banners the conservative slogan of "A fair day's pay for a fair
day's work" and to inscribe instead "Abolition of the wages system!"
Throughout his writings, he repeats in different form the admonition that
"wage labour and capital are two sides of the same coin".

Marx considered that nationalisation could be a means of accelerating the
development of capitalism but did not support nationalisation as such. On
the contrary, he argued that the more the state became involved in taking
over areas of production, the more it became the national capitalist.

Marx saw the state as the "executive committee" of a ruling class. In a
socialist society, he affirmed, the state, as the government of people,
would give way to a simple, democratic "administration of things".

Marx's vision of a socialist society can be fairly summed up as a
world-wide system of social organisation based on the common ownership and
democratic control of the means and instruments for producing and
distributing wealth by, and in the interests of, the whole community.

In other words, a universal classless, wageless and moneyless society
wherein human beings would voluntarily contribute in accordance with their
mental and/or physical abilities to the production and distribution of the
needs of their society and in which everyone would have free and equal
access to their needs.

JT

www.worldsocialism.org


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