Why Communism Kills: The Legacy of Karl MarxBy Dr. Fred. C. SchwarzINTRODUCTIONby Dr. Walter Judd In 1920, when I was working as a medical missionary in South China, I was introduced to Communism by long "indoctrination" by Chinese devotees. They were so sure of themselves that sometimes I had to wonder if their interpretation of human beings and society was factual and correct while ours was illusion and error. One day I said to the persuader: "It is plain that you totally believe what you are saying, but I can't agree. I'm sure it is against human nature." He exploded: "You Capitalists always talk about 'human nature;' but there is no such thing. Human beings are what you make them. Capitalism makes them acquisitive, selfish; it inevitably produces clashes and WAR. Communism makes persons selfless, with concern not for themselves as individuals, but for the whole society-the masses. Thus, Communism won't lead to clashes-and the whole world at last will have PEACE!" But there IS such a thing as human nature; and in countries under Communist control, logic demands that there must be organized and systematic killing of humans. I have not found a more profound student and interpreter of communism in our Western World than Dr. Fred Schwarz-no more lucid explainer of what Communists advocate and do-what they as Communists MUST do, and WHY. Dr. Schwarz understands that it is what Communists BELIEVE that requires their gaining control of the world, which in turn requires the killing of those who have been miscreated by their Capitalist environment and those who, in their ignorance or error, stubbornly resist. May I urge careful study of the booklet by Dr. Schwarz.
It is no secret that the fixed objective of Communists is the conquest
(called liberation) of the U.S.A. followed by the conversion of all people
still free into their version of the New Man. Why Communism KillsThe Record of Communist KillingCommunism kills! This is not debatable. The record is crystal clear. The U.S. Senate Internal Security Subcommittee conducted investigations into the number killed in the Soviet Union and China. Their report stated that 35 million to 45 million had been killed in the Soviet Union and 34 million to 62.5 million in Communist China. Even these figures are considered inadequate by authorities on the Soviet Union such as Solzhenitsyn and Antonov Ovesyenko. The latter, whose father led the Bolshevik storming of the Winter Palace in 1917, has recently published the book entitled The Time of Stalin-Portrait of a Tyranny. He calculates those killed as a result of the Communist conquest of Russia at 100 million. Some apologists for Communism acknowledge that Communism has killed in the past, but they blame this on incidental factors such as the traditions of cruelty and violence which existed in the countries conquered by the Communists, and they do not believe that killing is an essential ingredient of communism itself. They believe that the triumph of Communism in the United States, England, or Western Europe would not lead to mass slaughter. Are they right or are they suffering from a dangerous delusion? To answer this question, it is necessary to know why Communism kills. WhyA simple, direct answer to the question, "Why does communism kill?" is-because the founder of Communism, Karl Marx, told them it was necessary to kill a large segment of the population in order to attain the basic objective of Communism. Marx states in the Manifesto of the Communist Party:
To determine whether Marx intended this instruction to
be taken literally, it is necessary to review the doctrines and objectives
which Marx presented to his followers, and the programs which have been
designed and executed to reach those objectives. It is necessary to know
his vision of the future as well as his interpretation of the present.
We must know what Marx believed and what the Communists continue to believe.
The VisionMarx envisioned the creation of a new superior individual who would create a new society of unlimited abundance and freedom. It was the creation of a new earth, if not a new heaven, wherein "the redeemed" would dwell. This new man would be devoid of selfishness, greed, laziness, aggression, envy, malice, hate, and fear. He would be perfectly healthy, supremely intelligent, industrious, tolerant, generous and infinitely talented. By his industry and talents, he would create a society of abundance so that any individual could partake of all that he needed just as rich and poor today partake freely of the oxygen in the atmosphere. In this society, voluntary cooperation would replace coercion so there would be no need for governments, armies, police, courts, prisons and taxes. As each individual fulfilled his own desires, he would automatically minister to the well-being of others. In this classless, governmentless society, the slogan would be: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need." The golden era of Communism would have dawned for all mankind. The Marxist vision is seductive but delusional. It ignores
the realities of human nature including physical and mental disease as
well as intractable personality defects. Nevertheless, it is not difficult
to understand its allure, particularly to young idealists. The Means How was this perfect individual and the resulting perfect
society to be created? To skeptics, who asked this question, Marx had
a ready answer: "By science." When Marx lived, science had achieved many
miracles, and it was beginning to change to human condition. It has continued
to accomplish incredible miracles since the death of Marx. It has transformed
the material world by such things as the printing press, steam engine,
internal combustion engine, radio, television, aviation, computers, and
antibiotics; and it is now exploring new frontiers such as outer space
and genetic engineering. Although many of these miracles did not exist
during the lifetime of Karl Marx, his faith in the power of science was
infinite. He believed that science could change human nature itself. "Scientific" Laws For science to be successful, it must operate in accordance
with certain basic laws. Marx believed that he had discovered the laws
which directed the formation of human nature and that it was possible
to create a perfect human nature by programs based upon these laws. These
laws are: 1. There is no God:
When Marx and the Communists deny the existence of God,
they simultaneously deny the authority of the Ten Commandments, the existence
of absolute standards of right and wrong, of good and evil; and man is
left on the playing fields of the universe without a referee, without
a book of rules. The winning side in any conflict can decide on what rules
of conduct to apply. Morality is the creation of the victor. 2. Everything is material:
Marxism does not deny the existence of thought and spirit. It affirms that these are derivatives of matter; that the brain secretes thought as the liver secretes bile. Since thought and emotions are the product of material
elements, they can be controlled by controlling the material elements
which produce them. Thus the materialism of Marx provides the basis for
the control of ideas and attitudes and ultimately of human nature itself.
3. Human nature is the product of the economic environment in which the individual is raised.Marx states in the Communist Manifesto: "Your very ideas are but the outgrowth of the conditions of your bourgeois production." (Page 67) Engels, the co-author of the Manifesto, reaffirms this conviction of Marx when he states in his preface to the German edition of 1882: "The basic thought running through the Manifesto-that economic production, and the structure of society of every historical epoch necessarily arising therefrom, constitute the foundation for the political and intellectual history of that epoch." (Page 13) Marxism teaches that the economic environment creates
the ideas, attitudes and impulses that constitute human nature. It pays
attention to the environment of infancy and childhood since the brain
is undergoing more rapid development during this period. The experiences
of life, provided by the economic environment, are stored up within the
structure of the brain and ultimately reveal themselves in the thoughts
and emotions of the mature individual. 4. A special environment creates a special class:In order to live, it is necessary to secure food, clothing, housing and transportation. The lives of the vast majority of the people have been devoted to some facet of this productive process. As history develops, the methods of production change. New tools are created which create new environments. Those people who shared the same experiences in the process of production generated the same brain structure. Consequently, they thought and felt alike. They formed a class. In his analysis of the capitalist mode of production,
Marx allegedly discovered two economic environments. One was that shared
by those who owned the means of production. They formed a class which
he named the bourgeoisie. The other environment was that of wage labor.
The laborers formed the class known as the proletariat. Marx affirmed
that a state of universal conflict existed between the bourgeoisie and
the proletariat. He named this conflict the class struggle or the class
war. 5. The proletariat must win: Analyzing the capitalism of his era, Marx saw the class
struggle between the proletariat and the bourgeoisie as the dynamic of
modern history. He contended that he had discovered a scientific law which
assured that the proletariat would be victorious in this struggle; that
it would overthrow the bourgeoisie by a revolutionary process and establish
its hegemony in every country and ultimately over the entire world. He
and his co-laborer, Frederick Engels, were so convinced of the inevitability
of this that Engels undertook the study of military science so that he
could serve as commander-in-chief of the world proletarian armies. The
Communist Manifesto ends with the grim warning: "Let the ruling
classes tremble at a Communistic revolution. The proletarians have nothing
to lose but their chains. They have a world to win." (Page 96) The Regenerate ManMarx believed that a scientific program based upon these laws could create a new and superb quality of human nature. This new man would possess such diverse talents that he would be able to perform a vast variety of functions. He stated: "In communist society, where no one has one exclusive sphere of activity but each can become accomplished in any branch he wishes, society regulates the general production and thus makes it possible for me to do one thing today and another tomorrow, to hunt in the morning, fish in the afternoon, rear cattle in the evening, criticize after dinner, just as I have a mind, without ever becoming hunter, fisherman, shepherd, or critic." (Collected Works, Vol. V, page 275) The philosopher, Sydney Hook, comments on this statement:
"All we need to do to show its bizarre character is to recast Marx's schedule
of activities in terms of modern vocations and avocations; to perform
brain surgery in the morning, engage in nuclear research in the afternoon,
do some gentle gene-splicing in the evening, and conduct a symphony after
dinner, just as I have a mind to do without ever becoming a brain surgeon,
or nuclear physicist, or geneticist, or conductor." (Marxism and Beyond,
page 6) Steps to RegenerationDespite his capacity for self-delusion, Karl Marx did not believe that the desired condition known as Communism could emerge suddenly from existing capitalism. As the beautiful butterfly must pass through the stage of the caterpillar before it can fly in all its glory, Communism must pass through the stage of Socialism before the era of abundance and freedom can dawn. Steel can only be created by passing iron and coal through a fiery furnace, and Communism can only be created by passing society through the fires of revolution and dictatorship. Communism is the hypothetical end result which will reward
the survivors of the long march that is necessary to move from Capitalism
to Communism. Steps on this long march include: 1) Revolution, 2) Dictatorship
of the Proletariat, 3) Destruction of the Capitalist State, 4) Liquidation
of the Bourgeoisie, 5) Creation of Socialism, 6) Creation of the New Socialist
Man, 7) Withering Away of the State, and 8) Emergence of Communism. 1. Revolution:Marx taught that a revolution to destroy Capitalism was both necessary and inevitable. He acknowledged the possibility that the revolution in England and the United States might be peaceful, but he believed that most revolutions would be violent. Lenin dismissed the possibility of peaceful revolution and declared that violence was essential. A debate on the question whether revolution must be violent
is presently raging in the ranks of the Communists. Certain Communist
parties, known as Euro-Communist, such as the parties of Italy and Spain,
believe that the revolution may be peaceful while others ridicule the
idea as reformist. All are agreed that violence is permissible. 2. Dictatorship of the Proletariat:The purpose of the revolution is to overthrow the existing government and to replace it by the dictatorship of the Proletariat, which is actually the dictatorship of the Communist Party over the proletariat. The Communist Party monopolizes all the levers of power. Lenin defined the dictatorship of the proletariat as
follows: "The dictatorship of the proletariat is the rule-unrestricted
by law and based on force-of the proletariat over the bourgeoisie, a rule
enjoying the sympathy and support of the laboring and exploited masses."
(The State and the Revolution by Lenin as quoted in Problems
of Leninism by J. Stalin, page 49) 3. The Destruction of the Capitalist State:After a successful revolution, many of the institutions of the capitalist state remain relatively intact. These may include the army, the police force, the courts, the bureaucracy, and the educational system. If they are permitted to continue to exist, they pose a grievous threat to the new regime. Through them a counterrevolution may be organized which will threaten to overthrow the dictatorship of the proletariat. These residual institutions of the capitalist state must be destroyed. Lenin was as concerned with the maintenance of power
as with its seizure. He wrote the book The State and the Revolution
to show how it was necessary to destroy residual state institutions in
order to maintain Communist power. Above all, the army must be destroyed
and replaced by a new army, a "Red Army." 4. Liquidation of the Bourgeoisie:The Communists are followers of Karl Marx. They believe that the economic environment generates ideas and character. Their ultimate objective is to create the perfect character through the perfecting environment. When the revolution is successful, the majority of the bourgeois class remains. In the words of Karl Marx, they must be "swept out of the way and made impossible." If this is not done, they will form the environment in which a substantial segment of the population is nurtured and will thus destroy the prospect of a perfect society. The liquidation of the bourgeoisie is an essential step
of the path to Communism. This is why Communism must kill. Marxism in CambodiaThe leaders of the Cambodian Communist Party were convinced Marxists. The majority of them were converted to Marxism and Communism while they were students in France. Returning to Cambodia, they organized the Communist Party which they called the Khmer Rouge, and conquered Cambodia. They set out to be the best Communists the world had ever seen. They conducted the programs demanded by their Marxist doctrines with an amazing consistency and ruthlessness. These doctrines taught them that the environment generates character; that the capitalist environment generated an evil character; that the cities are the headquarters of capitalism; that the bourgeoisie must be liquidated and the residual people removed from the capitalist environment of the cities; that physical labor is regenerative. Translating these doctrines into deeds, they ordered the evacuation of the cities of Cambodia. Everyone had to go. No one was exempt for humanitarian reasons. The people were animals and could be treated like animals. Three million people who were crowded into Phnom Penh, were ordered to leave the city in one day. Everyone had to leave just as they were. Children in schools were not permitted to go home and join their parents but were driven out of the city like cattle. Hospitals were emptied of doctors, nurses, and patients. The situation is described in the book Murder of a Gentle Land by John Barron and Anthony Paul, which is published by Reader's Digest Press:
The population of Cambodia was about 7 million. It is estimated that between two and three million died. The remainder were forced to engage in the physical labor necessary to grow rice. The number of dead did not trouble the Communist leaders, and Ieng Sary, their foreign minister, said: "As long as we have one million left, that will be enough to make the new man." Pol Pot and his associates have earned the right to be called the most consistent Marxists the world has ever seen. In the Communist Program for human regeneration, killing is as necessary as the fire of the furnace is for the creation of steel This program of slaughter is rational if the basic premises
of Marxism are accepted. If there is no God who teaches, "Thou shalt not
kill," and if people are merely animals, why should they not be treated
as animals? Husbandmen who breed finer animals and destroy the inferior
ones in the process are respected and honored throughout the world. The
Communists believe that they are the husbandmen who have been selected
by history to enact the programs that will result in the creation of perfect
human animals. To hesitate to eliminate the diseased would be to betray
their mission. THE CREATION OF SOCIALISMA successful revolution, the establishment of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat, the Destruction of the Capitalist State and the Liquidation of the Bourgeoisie do not lead directly to Communism. There is an additional stage through which society must pass before Communism emerges. This state is known as Socialism The Communists often refer to their own special brand of socialism as "the first stage of Communism." The slogan of Communism is: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his need," whereas that of Socialism is: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his work." Few, if any, of the alleged blessings Communism promises are proffered by Socialism. Instead of abundance, there is scarcity; instead of freedom, there is universal coercion exercised by the Communist dictatorship; instead of being able to take whatever is needed, the individual receives a ration of scarce commodities in accordance with his productivity in society. Instead of no government, there is an enormous oppressive state apparatus. Socialism reaches its zenith in the society of the Gulag Archipelago, where each individual and group is given an amount to work to be done. The work is measured by the goods produced. So mush timber must be felled, so much coal or gold must be mined. The daily allotment of production is known as the norm. Those who do not produce their norm are penalized by a reduction in the daily allowance of food. This is equivalent to a death sentence. As the source of nourishment is lessened, the strength of the prisoner diminishes and his output becomes less also. This leads to a further cut in the food ration. A vicious circle is established which leads downward to death. No Communist claims that Communism exists anywhere in this present world. The official title of the Soviet Union is the "Union of Soviet Socialist Republics" or U.S.S.R. Communist China claims to be a "Socialist State of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat." Soviet leaders claim that Socialism has been built in
the Soviet Union and that they are now advancing towards the building
of Communism. Accomplishments and ProspectsThe Revolution, the Dictatorship of the Proletariat, the Destruction of the Capitalist State, the Liquidation of the Bourgeoisie, and the Creation of Socialism have now been accomplished in the Soviet Union. We have the history of nearly 70 years since the Communist conquest of Russia to guide us. What is the result? Can we discern encouraging signs of the creation of the new socialist man, the withering away of the state, and the emergence of the blissful state of Communism? All evidence indicates that the "new socialist man" is a cynical, apathetic, selfish individual. Alcoholism and crime and flourishing. Whenever and wherever the opportunity exists, the "new socialist man" flees from the "regenerative" environment of Socialism into the "degenerative" hell which capitalism is alleged to create. The hideous price of mass murder and coerced labor, which the Communists have forced the people to pay, has purchased nothing by regimentation, militarization, and privation. The state shows no signs of withering away. The monopolistic power of the Communist Party remains undiminished. The bureaucracy becomes more and more entrenched as it cherishes its special privileges. Human rights are occasionally affirmed in theory, but are ignored in practice. The vision of ultimately reaching Communism has faded
as scarcity, inequality, and authority become increasingly institutionalized.
The special privileges of the elite few, the leaders of the Communist
Party, increase. Maybe some of them have found their utopia-but the people
have found themselves in a prison of body and spirit. ConclusionCommunism is the literal fulfillment of Psalm 14: "The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God." The consequences are stated clearly: "They are corrupt: They have done abominable works; there is none that doeth good." The delusional doctrines of Karl Marx bear the same relationship to mass murder that the malarial parasite does to the disease of malaria. We must expose the errors of the basic doctrines of Marx if we wish to prevent the actions that result form the application of those doctrines. The repudiation of communist conduct is not enough. Communist defeats will be temporary if the errors of Marxist doctrine are not exposed. A new generation will be seduced by the doctrines, and communist killing will recommence. Some of the statements of Marx are true. This is not surprising. Every false philosophy and system contains elements of truth. A mixture of truth and falsehood is usually far more deadly than pure falsehood which can be discerned and isolated one and for all. Once pure falsehood is exposed, the battle is over. When the lethal ideological mixture contains elements of truth, these elements tend to revive the doctrine after it has appeared to have been destroyed. This accounts for the longevity of Marxism and its ability to survive the horrors of Stalinism, its history of brutality and terror, its multiple aggressions such as those in Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Afghanistan, its censorship and disdain for human rights. Essential elements of Marxist declines are false. This must be demonstrated, stated, and restated. The deplorable conduct of the communists is not due to their departing from the teachings of Marx, but to their obedience to them. "The proof of the pudding is in the eating." The ingredients of the communist pudding are lethal. The massive and widespread homicide that characterizes Communist conduct is the fulfillment of Marxism. The Marxist doctrines of ATHEISM, MATERIALISM, ECONOMIC DETERMINISM, CLASS, CLASS LIQUIDATION, CLASS DICTATORSHIP and INEVITABLE PROGRESS are false and deadly. Should Communism conquer countries with traditions of political liberty, artistic freedom and inalienable rights, the same doctrines that guided Lenin, Stalin, Mao Tse-tung, and Pol Pot will generate programs of mass murder and universal enslavement. Doctrine that is sincerely believed will triumph over tradition, tolerance and compassion. The Marxist demons conceived by falsehood, and nurtured
by ignorance, must be exorcized by truth. ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Schwarz has been a Christian lay preacher for many years, and his attention was first directed to Communism while at the University of Queensland where he debated a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Australia. Later he began a special study of the basic Communist texts in an effort to explore not only the deeds, but also the thought-life of Communism. He has become widely known as one of the most informed non-Communists in the world because of his knowledge and understanding of basic Communist texts. He issued an open challenge to debate any Communist on any platform in any part of the world. A number of debates resulted in the sharpening of his appreciation of the character, mind, and techniques of leading communists. He has devoted his talents and most of his life to an exposition of the tremendous danger which the progress of Communism presents to the entire civilized world. He expounds the doctrines of Communism in simple understandable language, with the conviction that understanding is the irreducible minimum for intelligent counteraction. In 1953 he founded the Christian Anti-Communism Crusade
of which he is now President Emeritus. Copyright © 2000, CACC. All Rights Reserved.
|