I think Stalin, for example, failed because he only pursued happiness. That and he killed 40 million people.Was the failure of communism mainly due to pursuing happiness not as a methodology or process; but, as the final goal of the system itself? — Shawn
If it has been collectively decided to aim for happiness on an collective level, then what meaning could individual happiness mean to anyone? — Shawn
I think Stalin, for example, failed because he only pursued happiness. That and he killed 40 million people.
Did you have another communist in mind? — Hanover
My thoughts are that this is the type of high-school philosophy that leads one to fall into a life of activism instead of growing up into a functional adult.
Those are, clearly, biases. But truly, I see nothing in this that needs any discussion. — AmadeusD
I doubt it. — Shawn
Soviet communists were really sincere about their intentions of improving the life of every individual, the collective, that is. Moreso, than any other political system communism was concerned with such an ethos. — Shawn
I'm unsure the bolded can be supported in any fashion that isn't fantastical. Particularly as the underlined undermines it. They aren't the same thing.
Perhaps this was the problem. — AmadeusD
I don't know why but this thread seems to be about why they were blind sighted by such an ambitious goal, and historically failed at it. — Shawn
Was the failure of communism mainly due to pursuing happiness not as a methodology or process; but, as the final goal of the system itself? — Shawn
bourgeoise dictating their views to the proletariat because they deem themselves wiser and more worldly. — I like sushi
If it has been collectively decided to aim for happiness on an collective level, then what meaning could individual happiness mean to anyone? — Shawn
I think Stalin, for example, failed because he only pursued happiness. — Hanover
That and he killed 40 million people. — Hanover
As your eyes met his in deep admiration, he'd have murdered you too. — Hanover
Soviet communists were really sincere about their intentions of improving the life of every individual — Shawn
Marx isn’t one of my favorite thinkers, but this just comes across as ad hominem gossip. I don’t quite see what Marx’s personal life has to do with his political philosophy. Unless you can connect the two maybe you should focus on his ideas.Marx as well was a drunkard who had an illegitimate child with his maid, whom his best friend Engels had to take fatherhood of, his best friend who constantly had to give Marx money because he couldn't bother to support his own family. Not to speak of Marx's poems where he claims to have struck a deal with Satan — Lionino
Was the failure of communism mainly due to pursuing happiness not as a methodology or process; but, as the final goal of the system itself? — Shawn
They were killed or jailed early on; their adherents relegated to positions of no influence.I think the gist here is associated with the simple fact that Soviet communists were really sincere about their intentions of improving the life of every individual, the collective, that is. — Shawn
If it has been collectively decided to aim for happiness on an collective level, then what meaning could individual happiness mean to anyone?
Was the failure of communism mainly due to pursuing happiness not as a methodology or process; but, as the final goal of the system itself?
I think Stalin, for example, failed because he only pursued happiness. That and he killed 40 million people. — Hanover
You, on the other hand, accept the criticisms joyfully, embracing its horrors. — Hanover
You can only be disappointed in Stalin if he had not achieved his goal, but he clearly did. — Tarskian
Kind of like I should be impressed with Jeffrey Dahmer. He set out to murder and then eat people, and by God he did it. What's not to like? — Hanover
https://aspectsofhistory.com/when-stalin-robbed-a-bank/
When Stalin Robbed A Bank
The story of Stalin's other career
Stalin knew it would require great daring to pull off such a coup. He also knew he would need the help of a dependable gang of fellow criminals. These were easy enough to find in Tiflis: Stalin had already been involved in previous robberies and had a trusty band of individuals whose services could be called upon. The robbery was meticulously planned. Twenty heavily armed brigands loitered in the city’s central square, awaiting the arrival of the carriages.
Hitler had spelled it out very clearly in Mein Kampf what he would do. — Tarskian
the Soviet Union was or became after him — Shawn
A slowly declining system where the socialist elements had to be removed one by one until we ended up in a corporative capitalist oligarchy called the Russian Republic? — Lionino
You didn't read it, did you? — Lionino
You seem to think that ‘collective happiness’ would be a supervenient happiness upon the society as a whole which overrides the happiness of the citizen itself (viz., the bee can be sacrificed for the hive). — Bob Ross
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