Marx Still Reigns Supreme. But Why?

By Stephen Soukup, AMERICAN GREATNESS    4 May 2024

This week, with the global celebration of May Day and with the ongoing protests on the nation’s college campuses, it is worth remembering that the man who largely inspired both was a hateful, intellectually shallow misanthrope, remembered by history and admired by jesters and dupes largely because of his odiousness.

The First of May is celebrated by socialists around the world, not specifically because of Karl Marx but to honor the anarchists hanged for the Haymarket Affair in Chicago in 1886. Nevertheless, this “International Labor Day” has very much become a Marxist tradition, formerly commemorated with parades and ceremonies by the Soviet Bloc nations and still very much acclaimed by those who still revere Marx and his communist ideology.Marx is likewise celebrated these days in the pro-Hamas camps on America’s college campuses. The ideology of struggle expressed by the protesters is very much in the Marxist tradition. Reams of Marxist literature have been collected at various abandoned/disbanded protest sites around the country, most notably on the UCLA campus. And, of course, Marxist organizations and agitators have been front and center throughout the demonstrations. As the inimitable Mike Gonzales has repeatedly stated, noting that Marxism is always at the forefront of these types of protests: “The issue is never the issue. The issue is the revolution.”

The question is why. Why is Karl Marx, of all people, so adored and admired by the world’s angry and disillusioned youth? He was but one of hundreds of thousands of 19th-century communists and but one of hundreds of leftist intellectuals and theorists of his era. Why him?The fact of the matter is that Marx was a loathsome person who hated nearly everyone and everything. He was aggressively lazy and didn’t have any knowledge of business, capitalism, or even any connection to the working class. As the late, great Paul Johnson noted, “the only member of the working class that he ever knew at all well, his one real contact with the ‘pro­letariat,’ was his household maid, Helene Demuth.” And so concerned was he with her plight that he forced himself on her, got her pregnant, denied paternity of her child, convinced Engels to pretend to be the father, and only met the child on one occasion.

More to the point, Marx was known by his friends, contemporaries, and even admirers to be a crackpot. Some of his erstwhile allies mocked his ideology as a quasi-religious attempt to replace Christian morality with something strikingly similar (Max Stirner). Some admired his ideas “in theory” but knew that they had no chance whatsoever to work “in praxis” (Ferdinand Lassalle). And still others candidly acknowledged that his economic schemes were borderline insane. Writing more than a half-century later, the renowned American leftist literary critic Edmund Wilson conceded that Marx’s foundational work, Kapital, “contains a treatise on economics, a his­tory of industrial development, and an inspired tract for the times; and the morality, which is part of the time suspended in the interests of scientific objectivity, is no more self-consistent than the economics is consistently scientific or the his­tory undistracted by the exaltation of apocalyptic vision.”

In short, Marx’s theories were a mess—and everyone knew it, even before World War I proved them so and forced a full-scale “revision” of the entire movement.

So again, why Marx? Why and how did this angry, odious, insufferable fantasist become the intellectual lodestar for the global left?

The answer is complicated, obviously, but can largely be broken down into three primary contributing factors.

First, Marx’s obnoxiousness proved to be an advantage as much as a liability. Marx was a bully. Indeed, he was among the most practiced and skilled bullies in the world. Anyone who dared to contradict him or to offer a competing theory of leftism was an open target for aggressive and hostile rebuttal. Marx attacked nearly all his one-time friends, including Stirner, Weitling, Bauer, and Feuerbach. He attacked the utopian socialists who preceded him. He attacked the anarchists who followed him. He attacked everyone, and he attacked them viciously and, for the most part, effectively. He successfully bullied all his potential competitors for intellectual supremacy of the left into submission or exile, often self-imposed.

Second, Marx was a “revolutionary” in the sense that he advocated violent overthrow of the existing regime. Whereas many of his contemporaries were mere theorists or incrementalists, Marx favored bold, dramatic, society-transforming action. Indeed, he believed that a violent, destructive, and bloody revolution was a necessary component of the communist transformation.

Needless to say, such violent fantasies often appeal to the young and disaffected. Although most of Marx’s contemporaries favored the incremental establishment of their ideology, those who were especially antisocial and disgruntled with the status quo found his illusions of brutal heroism cathartic and enticing. Much the same is true today, as it was in the period between Marx’s and our own…

Which brings us to the third reason Marx is so revered today.

Among those who admired Marx’s call for bloody revolution was a singular psychopath who, when he was merely 17, saw his brother Sasha hanged by the Czar, who was exiled to Siberia when he was 25, and who spent much of the rest of his adulthood bouncing around and being thrown out of various countries in Europe for advocating violence in Marx’s name. That psychopath—known as Lenin—would eventually be given safe passage back to Russia by the German government, who rightfully anticipated that he would end Russia’s participation in World War I. Almost immediately after his famous arrival at the Finland Station in Petrograd, Lenin began consolidating power. In time, he would become the world’s first prolific mass murderer—thereby proving Marx’s augury of widespread bloodshed correct. He would also found, in March 1919, the Communist International (the Comintern), which he would use to place spies and Marxist advocates among the labor leaders in nearly every major nation on earth.

The rest, as they say, is history—ugly, brutal, repetitious, and painfully stupid history. Karl Marx was a crackpot with a shockingly poor understanding of history and economics. The same can be said of his multitudes of modern-day disciples. If they were otherwise, clearly, they wouldn’t be his disciples.

May 4, 2024 | 8 Comments »

Leave a Reply

8 Comments / 8 Comments

  1. “The Zionist movement had been opposed by Marxist theorists and
    revolutionary leaders at every opportunity, as declasse, spiritually
    “strangers in their own country,” and “deserters” from the battlefield
    of class conflict. As early as 1903, Vladimir Lenin wrote in the party’s
    newspaper, Iskra (The Spark), that the very idea of a Jewish nationality
    was “manifestly reactionary” and “in conflict with the interests
    of the Jewish proletariat.” Ten years later, this opinion was substantiated
    by Joseph Stalin in the pamphlet Marxism and the National
    Question. Only once did Bolshevik and Zionist leaders meet and talk
    about their respective views toward each other’s movements. A relatively
    little known personal reminiscence by Chaim Weizmann, world
    Zionist leader and Israel’s first president, has recently disclosed a discussion
    which he had with Lenin. In April, 1910, the two leaders,
    both on the threshold of their political careers, chanced to meet in a
    Paris cafe where they spoke, at some length, of political theory and
    Jewish nationalism. While unmoving in his opinion regarding Zionist-
    Communist compatibility, Lenin took great pains to assure Weizmann
    that anti-Semitism played absolutely no part in his political decisions,
    and that the incompatibility he spoke of was based strictly on political
    theory.8 The political use of the virulent anti-Semitism deeply ingrained
    in Russian history and, in fairness, Eastern European history
    as a whole, was only later employed in nearly every phase of Bolshevik
    anti-Zionist campaigns.”

    I’m reading Krammer Arnold – The Forgotten Friendship on Scribd. Check it out: https://www.scribd.com/book/545257237

  2. “His differences with the communists, he explained, were less ideological than tactical. German communists he had known before he took power, he told Rauschning, thought politics meant talking and writing. They were mere pamphleteers, whereas “I have put into practice what these peddlers and pen pushers have timidly begun”, adding revealingly that “the whole of National Socialism” was based on Marx.”

    https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/hitler-and-the-socialist-dream-1186455.html

  3. @Edgar

    So now I’m a Trotskyist/atheist.

    Really? I never would have guessed. Thanks for the heads up. And thanks for making me feel young. I never would have guessed that you of all people would tell me that my jokes were dated, old timer. 😀

  4. BASTIEN-

    So now I’m a Trotskyist/atheist. What more babble are you ready to drool.
    Felix is what he is, an honest man.

  5. Why? That’s easy. Felix. Aided and abetted by his faithful Sancho Panza, Edgar. 😀