The enemies of the proletariat were not just the owners of the means of production. They were the millions of supporters of those owners, the entire bourgeoisie, tens of thousands of kulaks, hundreds of thousand cossacks, every soldier fighting on the side of the White Russian army, every peon who attempted to sell a bag of grain and every party member who disagreed with the officially adopted line. All were to be crushed - brutally, summarily and without pity. Lenin made that abundantly clear on many occasions long before Stalin took over, and this was a logical consequence of Marxism - the dictatorship of the proletariat.Brian Peacock wrote: ↑Mon Oct 12, 2020 1:55 pmFor Marx government implies a form of dictatorship by one group or class over all others. In the context of his times this is a fair analysis I think, and perhaps still holds true today. In this sense 'dictatorship of the proletariat' can be easily transposed into the popular aphorism 'government of the people, by the people, for the people'. Where Marx parted from the sentiments of Lincoln however was that he saw this form of government as a necessary transitory step on the road to Communism, a road that led away from traditional forms of top-down, hierarchical state control towards a more bottom-up, community-based approach to government. His point was that as the vast majority of people were subject to the control of a small group who embodied and wieled the unlimited power of the state on their own behalf and their own interests, overcoming that situation would involve the vast majority embodying and wielding that power in the interest of themselves. To conflate the word 'dictatorship' in the quote with Stalinism without this context is a little misleading because we don't simply associate 'dictatorship' with the authority to determine the social, economic, and political agenda but with totalitarianisms, despotism, oppression, and brutality etc. Of course, Marx suggested that violence would be necessary to bring about this change in social affairs, but only because the bad guys had all the power and all the guns and would never make a free choice to give up their entrenched power and systems of control voluntarily - particularly as that power and control had been acquired, secured, and maintained by violence in the first place. I'd accept that there's a bit of a paradox there btw.
"Marx said that the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat lies between capitalism and communism. The more the proletariat presses the bourgeoisie, the more furiously they will resist. We know what vengeance was wreaked on the workers in France in 1848. And when people charge us with harshness we wonder how they can forget the rudiments of Marxism. "
"We can't expect to get anywhere unless we resort to terrorism."
"Comrade Fyodorov, It is obvious that a whiteguard insurrection is being prepared in Nizhni. You must strain every effort, appoint three men with dictatorial powers (yourself, Markin and one other), organise immediately mass terror, shoot and deport the hundreds of prostitutes who are making drunkards of the soldiers, former officers and the like. Not a minute of delay. I can't understand how Romanov could leave at a time like this! [...] Peters, Chairman of the Extraordinary Commission, says that they also have reliable people in Nizhni. You must act with all energy. Mass searches. Execution for concealing arms. Mass deportation of Mensheviks and unreliables."
"Hang (hang without fail, so the people see) no fewer than one hundred known kulaks, rich men, bloodsuckers."
"It is necessary — secretly and urgently to prepare the terror."
"Dictatorship is rule based directly upon force and unrestricted by any laws. The revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat is rule won and maintained by the use of violence by the proletariat against the bourgeoisie, rule that is unrestricted by any laws."
So, no, the left has not always accepted the necessity of opposition.
"I am confident that the suppression of the Kazan Czechs and White Guards, and likewise of the bloodsucking kulaks who support them, will be a model of mercilessness."