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I have no idea how they filled world revolution, how did they feel about it? I have no idea but since all three of them had the brains of a fence post i am sure they were all for it, they just did not know what they were rebelling against. just that they wanted to rule the world.

2006-12-13 15:50:22 · answer #1 · answered by hironymus 7 · 0 1

Marx felt that a worldwide Socialist revolution was inevitable in a well developed Capitalist country.
Lenin at the start supported and believed in 'World Revolution' and supported the Communists in Germany, Italy, France and the United Kingdom and was disappointed when none of the countries showed signs of a Communist revolution. Lenin ignored a lot of what Marx said in the construction of a Communist society and felt the a dictatorship of the proletariat would push through (his view of) Marx's vision. After the Russian Civil War with the economy on the brink of destruction Lenin dropped pure Communism and adopted the New Economic Policy which included Capitalist elements in the economy, he also quietly dropped his support of communists abroad.
This was expanded by Stalin who took the view of 'Russia first' in the building up of a Communist society and although he funded Communists overseas his main focus was enforcing his grip on power within the Soviet Union rather than actually funding Communist revolution overseas.

2006-12-14 07:16:48 · answer #2 · answered by phillip_bournemouth 2 · 0 0

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