Archive for the ‘Communism’ Category

Grothman’s Bipartisan Hmong New Year Resolution | U.S. … – Glenn Grothman

Congressman Glenn Grothman (WI-06) has introduced H. Res. 801, a bipartisan resolution recognizing the cultural and historical significance of the Hmong New Year.

Grothman is joined by Representatives Bryan Steil (R-WI), Mark Pocan (D-WI), Gwen Moore (D-WI), Scott Fitzgerald (R-WI), Mike Gallagher (R-WI), Betty McCollum (D-MN), Doug LaMalfa (R-CA), Dean Phillips (D-MN), Jim Costa (D-CA), Scott Peters (D-CA), Sara Jacobs (D-CA) Michelle Steel (R-CA), David Valadao (R-CA), Dina Titus (D-NV) and Young Kim (R-CA).

Wisconsin is the state with the 3rd highest Hmong population and I am privileged to represent one of Wisconsins largest Hmong communities. Each year, I attend the New Year celebrations in my district and am looking forward to attending them again this year in places like Oshkosh and Sheboygan, said Grothman. These celebrations of thanksgiving are an honor to attend the food, music, and dance make these festivals truly special events. The Hmong people will always be dear to my heart for the important role they played helping the United States fight communism in the Vietnam war. I am glad that both sides of the aisle have come together to recognize Hmong Americans significant role in our communities and their pursuit of the American Dream.

The Hmong New Year is a significant cultural tradition in Minnesotas Fourth District, which is home to our nations largest Hmong population, said Congresswoman McCollum. With this resolution, I join my Hmong neighbors and constituents in recognizing the holiday, giving thanks for the harvest, and celebrating the year to come.

Congresswoman Jacobs said, Hmong New Year is celebrated across San Diego and I am proud to recognize this important holiday with my colleagues from both parties in this resolution. I join my Hmong neighbors in giving thanks and celebrating the year to come.

I am proud to join my colleagues in a bipartisan effort to recognize the cultural and historical significance of the upcoming Hmong New Yeara time to honor their ancestors and give thanks for the harvest. I wish everyone who observes the holiday a safe and happy celebration,said Congressman Fitzgerald.

Hmong New Year is a joyous time to commemorate the end of harvest season and bring the community together. I am excited to join my constituents in celebrating this new beginning and the rich tradition of Hmong New Year, said Congresswoman Moore.

Congressman Pocan added, The annual Hmong New Year celebrations are a treasured part of Wisconsins community and culture, and we welcome the opportunity to recognize this wonderful tradition. I am happy to support this resolution honoring the Hmong community in Wisconsin and nationwide.

Hmong New Year is one of the greatest and most valued traditions in our San Joaquin Valley. Each year, this celebration draws 100,000 people to honor the rich culture of the Hmong people and welcome the New Year. I am proud to co-sponsor this bipartisan resolution that recognizes the importance of Hmong heritage, and its an honor to represent the Hmong community, said Congressman Costa.

The Hmong New Year is traditionally celebrated at the end of the rice harvest season in Laos and Southeast Asia in late November and early December. In the United States, the Hmong New Year traditions have carried over, occurring from October through December, and have become significant celebrations for Hmong Americans and many others.

Click here to view Grothman floor remarks on the Hmong New Year.

Click here for the full text of the resolution.

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U.S. Rep. Glenn Grothman (R-Glenbeulah) is serving his fourth term representing Wisconsins 6th Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives.

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Grothman's Bipartisan Hmong New Year Resolution | U.S. ... - Glenn Grothman

Another View: DeSantis was strong, Haley was sharp, Ramaswamy … – Press Herald

There were few fireworks at Wednesdays Republican debate in Miami. No major flops either (though Vivek Ramaswamy continued to prove hes unfit to be president and, in the famous words of Chris Christie at a previous debate, he sounds more like ChatGPT.)

Was there a clear winner? With Donald Trump not on stage and instead holding a rally about 10 miles away in Hialeah can you truly declare one?

Wednesday was a good night for Ron DeSantis. With only five candidates on stage, he had a chance to talk at length about Israel, gunning down Mexican cartels and other topics.

The question at this point isnt whether DeSantis will surpass Trump in polls that show the former president with a double-digit lead. DeSantis is fighting to be the anti-Trump alternative, and his debate performance, as good as it was, didnt neutralize the main threat for that No. 2 spot: former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley.

If DeSantis presence on stage has become more polished over the course of three debates, hes also facing a formidable opponent in Haley. Quick on her toes or, as she boasted, her five-inch heels Haley didnt cede any ground.

With the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks against Israel as the backdrop, the first part of the debate was devoted to foreign policy. DeSantis landed a good one-liner, saying he would tell Benjamin Netanyahu to Finish the job against Hamas. He acknowledged the threat of antisemitism in the United States and said he would cancel the visas of college students who support the terrorist group. He sounded tough, so how hard would it be to denounce neo-Nazi marches that have taken place near Orlando something he has yet to do?

Foreign policy doesnt usually decide presidential elections, until it does. With the wars in the Middle East and in Ukraine, the world is more dangerous. DeSantis came out strong on Israel, but the topic has been Haleys strength since the first debate. By calling Vladimir Putin a thug, and defending the need to support Ukraine to deter Russia, she may face resistance from a Republican Party thats skeptical of U.S. involvement in the war, but she makes a strong argument that America is weaker when it sits on the sidelines.

DeSantis answer on Ukraine, by the way, was a flop. He said he would not send troops to the country, even though thats not under consideration, and deflected by switching to border security.

Meanwhile, at Trumps Hialeah rally, the focus wasnt on an unstable world or policy discussions. It was Trump himself, as usual.

Trump took his adoring audience on a gallop down memory lane, reviewing his greatest hits mean-spirited nicknames, murderous illegal immigrants and all.

The former president touted his Muslim travel ban; name-dropped Crooked Joe Biden, Pencil Neck Adam Schiff and, of course, Ron DeSanctimonius; pledged to stop the invasion of our Southern border; and compared illegal immigrants to bloody-thirsty Hannibal Lecter. He promised the largest deportation operation in American history.

He told his predominantly Hispanic fans that he would protect them from communism on these shores.

Most amazing, as always, were Trumps shameless accusations that the radical left Democrat communists are shredding the Constitution and gutting the rule of law. We are not the ones endangering American democracy, he said. We are the ones saving it.

This from the man who incited the Jan. 6. Capitol assault on U.S. democracy; faces charges in Georgia that he unlawfully conspired to change the 2020 election outcome while participating in a criminal enterprise; and vows to use the hammer of the law to rain down retribution on his enemies.

Right, saving our democracy.

What would truly reinforce our democracy is a strong Republican alternative to Trump, one that respects our Constitution and democratic processes. But, were not naive. Given the former presidents outsize popularity, its hard to envision any other candidates path to primary victory.

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Another View: DeSantis was strong, Haley was sharp, Ramaswamy ... - Press Herald

Communism in Britain: The unbroken thread – Socialist Appeal

In this sense, the theory of the Communists may be summed up in the single sentence: Abolition of private property

You [the bourgeoisie] are horrified at our intending to do away with private property. But in your existing society, private property is already done away with for nine-tenths of the population; its existence for the few is solely due to its non-existence in the hands of those nine-tenths.

You reproach us, therefore, with intending to do away with a form of property, the necessary condition for whose existence is the non-existence of any property for the immense majority of society.

Marx and Engels, The Communist Manifesto.

It is always said that communism is alien or foreign to our British way of life. Conservatism is traditionally regarded as the mainstay of the country. But the reality, when we look further, is somewhat different to this convention.

The ideas of communism have, in fact, very deep roots in British history, especially among the oppressed. In fact, the idea of a society founded, not on private property, but on common ownership has been around for a very long time.

William Morris wrote a wonderful account in 1890 about a future communist society, called News From Nowhere. Although dated, it gave a glimpse of the communist future, where want is abolished and people live in harmony. In Morris view, the Houses of Parliament would be turned into something actually useful, where farmyard manure was stored.

Now, dear guest, let me tell you that our present parliament would be hard to house in one place, because the whole people is our parliament.

The idea William Morris was conjuring up here was a vision of workers democracy.

The idea of the woman being the property of the man, whether he was husband, father, bother, or whatnot. That idea has of course vanished with private property.

Of course, communist ideas were not confined to Britain, but had an international character. Wherever exploitation exists, so does the idea of a society free from class oppression and violence, where everything is shared in common.

In Britain, we can trace such ideas of communism back to the Middle Ages, despite the fact that the material conditions for a classless society did not as yet exist. It would take the advent of capitalism, with its industry and world market, to develop the productive forces to such a level as to make this realisable.

In the Middle Ages, the serfs, viciously exploited by the landowners, longed for a real paradise on Earth, where all wants are satisfied. This dream gave rise to the idea of the Land of Cokaygne, a utopian land where peace and plenty reigned. Here everything is possible:

Geese fly roasted on the spit,

As Gods my witness, to that spot,

Crying out, Geese, all hot, all hot!

All is common to young and old,

To stout and strong, to meek and bold.

This simple thought, of peasant communism, which runs through the Middle Ages, eventually evolved and led us to the ideas of communism of today.

The crisis of feudalism gave way to the struggles of John Ball and the Peasants Revolt of 1381. In the words of the rebel-priest:

Ah, ye good people, the matters goeth not well to pass in England, nor shall not do till everything be common, and that there be no villeins [serfs] nor gentlemen, but that we may be all equal

The emergence of private property and government was regarded as the natural outcome of the Fall and mans sinful state. There arose a desire for a return to a Golden Age, which embodied memories of an earlier primitive communism, where the state, private property, and classes did not exist.

The rise of the bourgeoisie and the breakdown of feudalism gave rise to new class conflicts and ideas. We can witness the impact of Thomas Mores Utopia of the early 16th century, which is interwoven with communist ideas.

The riche men not only by private fraud, but also by common laws do every day pluck and snatche away from the poore some part of their daily living I can perceave nothing but a certain conspiracy of riche men procuring their owne commodities under the name and title of the commonwealth.

There was to be no poverty in Mores Utopia, a communist society which rejected all luxuries. Jewels were to become simply the playthings of children. Gold, having lost its value, was used to make chamber pots. Funnily enough, Lenin also suggested gold under communism be used to build public toilets.

Mores vision, however, had no social force to turn it into reality. It took the upheavals of the English Civil War between Crown and Parliament, representing the bourgeois revolution, to stir up those forces. Those who dared to dream now wanted to make such ideas a reality.

The breakdown of censorship in class battles of the 1640s, resulted in the emergence of a host of radical sects. The most prominent were the Levellers. But the most left-wing were the Diggers the True Levellers led by Gerrard Winstanly.

As an agricultural-based society, everything was dependent on the land. The Diggers therefore demanded the common ownership of the land and went on to establish an agrarian communist settlement upon St Georges Hill in Surrey, as an example to be followed elsewhere.

While Mores Utopia was written in Latin, Winstanleys writings were in English, appealing directly to the masses stirred into activity by the great revolution. While overlaced with religious phraseology, they have an overtly communist character.

In the beginning of time, wrote Winstanley, the great creator Reason made the earth to be a common treasury. But this was stolen and private property created by state power: The sword brought in property and holds it up. The earth ceased to be a common treasury and became a place wherein one torments another.

Although, in fact, it was the emergence of private property that gave rise to the development of the state, Winstanley was correct to see private ownership and appropriation as the cause of all wars, bloodshed, theft, and enslaving laws that hold people under misery. Only the abolition of private property can end this enmity in all lands.

With the defeat of the Digger and Leveller movement, the restoration of 1660 and then the Settlement of 1688 brought to power an alliance of sections of the aristocracy with the upper bourgeoisie. The rise of capitalism introduced a new dynamic and the emergence of a new class, the industrial working class.

Radical figures emerged with the impact of the French and American Revolutions, such as John Wilkes (1763-78), Thomas Paine (1737-1809), William Corbett (1763-1835), and Henry Orator Hunt (1773-1835). But the figure who made the greatest impact was Robert Owen (1771-1858), a Welsh factory owner who became a socialist and visionary.

These were years of turmoil, with the rise of illegal trade unions and workers battles for democratic rights. Owen offered a way out of the misery of capitalist exploration through the establishment of communist colonies.

He was struck by the materialist philosophers of the Enlightenment, believing that a changed environment would change peoples characters.

In his cotton factory at New Lanark, he treated workers as human beings instead of slaves. He equipped it with a school and shop at low prices. This transformed workers and their families.

Owen wanted to apply this to the rest of society. But he soon realised that his appeals to the ruling class and the laws of capitalism were incompatible to the setting up of a socialist commonwealth.

He therefore tried himself to establish new model colonies in America and England, organised on the basis of full communism.

But they were to fail, as it was not possible to establish small islands of communism surrounded by an ocean of capitalism. The laws of capitalism would eventually prevail.

Owen believed three things stood in his way: private property, religion, and marriage in its present form.

Shunned by the ruling class, Owen turned directly to the newly-formed working class, establishing cooperatives and then trade unions. In 1834, he established the Grand National Consolidated Trades Union, which had a constitution calling for the overthrow of capitalism.

Owens ideas fed into the working class, including the fight for a new society. These ideas, together with the horrors of industrialisation, provided the fertile ground for the rise of the great Chartist movement.

The Chartists created the first political party of the British working class. While it was based on six demands, beginning with the male adult vote and ending with annual parliaments, these were seen as a means to an end a new egalitarian society.

The Chartist movement split between the reformists (moral force) and the revolutionaries (physical force), with the latter becoming the overwhelming majority. They engaged in mass petitions to general strikes, to insurrection, as in the Newport Rising.

To establish communism, the working class needed to conquer political power.

What the people want is a government of the whole people to protect the whole people, stated Bronterre OBrien. And this once acquired, they will be in a position to establish Owenism, or St. Simonism, or any other ism that a majority may think best calculated to ensure the well-being of the whole.

The rich have never cared one straw for justice or humanity, since the beginning of the world, he continued. Force and force alone has ever subdued them into humanity.

The Chartists were very much influenced by the 1848 revolution. This produced a communist wing, headed by Ernest Jones and Julian Harney, who were acquaintances of Marx and Engels.

Emancipation of labour is the only worthy objective of political warfare, stated Harney. That those who till the soil shall be its first masters, that those who raise the food shall be its first partakers, that those who build mansions shall live in them.

Harneys paper, the Red Republican, published the first English translation of the Communist Manifesto, written by Marx and Engels. From then on, the struggle for communism, linked to the historic role of the working class, superseded utopian dreams.

They [the Chartists] have progressed from the idea of simple political reform to the idea of a Social Revolution, wrote Julian Harney.

Engels described it as the union of Socialism with Chartism, the reproduction of French Communism in an English manner.

Marx and Engels had abandoned the term socialist, which was linked to middle-class utopian notions, for the word communist. They changed the woolly slogan All Men are Brethren to the class slogan Proletarians of all lands unite.

With the defeat of Chartism, which in many ways was an anticipation of future developments, Ernest Jones attempted to rally the scattered ranks of Chartism on the sound principles of social revolution.

But the changed objective situation, with the growth of capitalism, cut across these efforts. And Chartism gave way to the epoch of model unionism and class collaboration.

Nevertheless, the flame of communism was kept alive by Marx and Engels, who now lived in England. Together with the preparatory work of Jones and Harney, especially the formation of the Fraternal Democrats, they helped to found the First International in London in September 1864.

When the German revolutionary Weitling stated there was no English tradition of communism, Marx replied indignantly with a list:

Thomas More, the Levellers, Owen, Thompson, Watts, Holyoake, Harney, Morgan, Southwell, Goldwyn Barmby, Greaves, Edmonds, Hobson, Spence will be amazed, or turn in their graves, when they hear that they are no communists

But it is in the 1880s that we see the revival in working-class militancy in the emergence of New Unionism, which unionised the unskilled and semi-skilled workers. With it came a revival of socialist and Marxist ideas.

In 1881, the Democratic Federation was formed, which changed its name three years later to become the Social Democratic Federation an avowedly Marxist organisation, intent on spreading the ideas of communism.

They turned Marxism into a dogma, however, rather than a guide to action. It therefore remained a sect, incapable of linking the ideas of Marxism to the real movement of the working class.

The Independent Labour Party was created in 1893, but it professed a milk-and-water socialism. Engels nevertheless urged the small group of Marxists to join it and advocate communist ideas.

But Tom Mann, who was its secretary, gave up and turned to trade unionism, while Edward Aveling, Marxs son-in-law, returned to the SDF. The void was filled with the likes of Ramsay MacDonald, a recent convert from liberalism.

When the Labour Party was formed in 1900, it was composed of the ILP, the SDF, and the trade unions. It was the beginning of a real mass workers party.

Within twelve months, however, the SDF had resigned after failing to get a resolution passed committing the party to common ownership of the means of production and class war. The Labour Party soon fell under the influence of reformism.

The SDF evolved in the years that followed and in 1911 became the British Socialist Party (BSP). In 1916, the party had ousted the pro-war faction around Hyndman, who then resigned. By this time, the BSP had affiliated to the Labour Party.

In 1917, radicalised by the imperialist war, the BSP were deeply supportive of the Bolshevik Revolution. Many of their members took part in the Hands Off Russia Committee.

In 1919, a new (third) Communist International was formed. Lenin abandoned the old name of social-democratic, associated with the betrayal of 1914, for communist.

The Third International made an appeal for communist groups and parties to be established. In Britain, preparatory negotiations took place between different groups, the biggest being the BSP, to establish a Communist Party of Britain, as part of the Communist International.

The party was launched at the Unity Convention in London in August 1920, based upon the principles:

(a) Communism as against capitalism

(b) The Soviet idea as against parliamentary (bourgeois) democracy

(c) Learning from history that dominant classes never yield to the revolutionary enslaved class without a struggle, the Communists must be prepared to meet and crush all the efforts of capitalist reactionaries to regain their lost privileges pending a system of thorough-going Communism. In other words, the Communist Party must stand for the dictatorship of the proletariat.

Although numbering around 2,000 members, it drew to its ranks the cream of the working class. They soon began to lay plans for building a mass communist party.

Unfortunately, with the death of Lenin and the rise of Stalinism, the young communist parties were blown off course, including in Britain. From originally supporting world revolution, they adopted the Stalinist theory of socialism in one country.

This led to their nationalist and reformist degeneration. They simply sanctioned every twist and turn demanded by Moscow, and lauded the socialist paradise in Russia and the socialist countries without criticism.

The Soviet Union would eventually collapse, suffocated by a bureaucratic stranglehold. Without workers democracy, the state-owned planned economy was doomed. Its fall was not a collapse of socialism or communism, but Stalinism, a bureaucratic one-party totalitarian state.

Today, the small Communist Party of Britain, a shadow of its former self, has nothing in common with communism, except its name. But it is a misnomer. While paying lip-service to Marxism, it has long ago become a reformist party, no different from the Labour and trade union lefts.

Given the deepening crisis and turmoil of capitalism, the ideas of communism have once again become increasingly popular, especially amongst the youth.

The task before us remains the building of a genuine revolutionary communist party, based on the ideas of Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Trotsky. Our aim is the overthrow of capitalism in Britain and internationally, and the establishment of a world federation of socialist states.

On that basis, the old dreams of a classless society can be made a reality. And we can truly establish a paradise on Earth.

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Communism in Britain: The unbroken thread - Socialist Appeal

November 7 as Victims of Communism Day – 2023 – Reason

Bones of tortured prisoners. Kolyma Gulag, USSR (Nikolai Nikitin, Tass).(NA)

NOTE: The following post is largely adapted from last year's November 7 post on the same subject.

Since 2007, I have advocated designating May 1 as an international Victims of Communism Day. The May 1 date was not my original idea. But I have probably devoted more time and effort to it than any other commentator. In my view, May 1 is the best possible date for this purpose because it is the day that communists themselves used to celebrate their ideology, and because it is associated with communism as a global phenomenon, not with any particular communist regime. However, I have also long recognized that it might make sense to adapt another date for Victims of Communism Day, if it turns out that some other date can attract a broader consensus behind it. The best should not be the enemy of the good.

As detailed in my May 1 post from 2019, November 7 is probably the best such alternative, and in recent years it has begun to attract considerable support. Unlike May 1, this choice is unlikely to be contested by trade unionists and other devotees of the pre-Communist May 1 holiday. While I remain unpersuaded by their objections on substantive grounds, pragmatic considerations suggest that an alternative date is worth considering, if it can sidestep objections and thereby attract broader support.

The November 7 option is not without its own downsides. From an American standpoint, one obvious one is that it will sometimes fall close to election day, as is the case this year. On such occasions, a November 7 Victims of Communism Day might not attract as much attention as it deserves, because many willunderstandablybe focused on electoral politics instead. Nonetheless, November 7 remains the best available alternative to May 1; or at least the best I have seen so far.

For that reason, I amonce againdoing a Victims of Communism Day post on November 7, in addition to the one I do on May 1. If November 7 continues to attract more support, I may eventually switch to that date exclusively. But, for now, I reserve the options of returning to an exclusive focus on May 1, doing annual posts on both days, or switching to some third option should a good one arise.

In addition to its growing popularity, November 7 is a worthy alternative because it is the anniversary of the day that the very first communist regime was established in Russia. All subsequent communist regimes were at least in large part inspired by it, and based many of their institutions and policies on the Soviet model.

The Soviet Union did not have the highest death toll of any communist regime. That dubious distinction belongs to the People's Republic of China. North Korea has probably surpassed the USSR in the sheer extent of totalitarian control over everyday life. Pol Pot's Cambodia may have surpassed it in terms of the degree of sadistic cruelty and torture practiced by the regime, though this is admittedly very difficult to measure. But all of these tyranniesand morewere at least to a large extent variations on the Soviet original.

Having explained why November 7 is worthy of consideration as an alternative date, it only remains to remind readers of the more general case for having a Victims of Communism Day. The following is adopted from this year's May 1 Victims of Communism Day post, and some of its predecessors:

The Black Book of Communism estimates the total number of victims of communist regimes at 80 to 100 million dead, greater than that caused by all other twentieth century tyrannies combined. We appropriately have a Holocaust Memorial Day. It is equally appropriate to commemorate the victims of the twentieth century's other great totalitarian tyranny.

Our comparative neglect of communist crimes has serious costs. Victims of Communism Day can serve the dual purpose of appropriately commemorating the millions of victims, and diminishing the likelihood that such atrocities will recur. Just as Holocaust Memorial Day and other similar events promote awareness of the dangers of racism, anti-Semitism, and radical nationalism, so Victims of Communism Day can increase awareness of the dangers of left-wing forms of totalitarianism, and government domination of the economy and civil society.

While communism is most closely associated with Russia, where the first communist regime was established, it had equally horrendous effects in other nations around the world. The highest death toll for a communist regime was not in Russia, but in China. Mao Zedong's Great Leap Forward was likely the biggest episode of mass murder in the entire history of the world.

November 7, 2017 was the 100th anniversary of the Bolshevik seizure of power in Russia, which led to the establishment of the first-ever communist regime. On that day, I put up a post outlining some of the lessons to be learned from a century of experience with communism. The post explains why most of the horrors perpetrated by communist regimes were intrinsic elements of the system. For the most part, they cannot be ascribed to circumstantial factors, such as flawed individual leaders, peculiarities of Russian and Chinese culture, or the absence of democracy. The latter probably did make the situation worse than it might have been otherwise. But, for reasons I explained in the same post, some form of dictatorship or oligarchy is probably inevitable in a socialist economic system in which the government controls all or nearly all of the economy.

While the influence of communist ideology has declined greatly since its mid-twentieth century peak, it is far from dead. Largely unreformed communist regimes remain in power in Cuba and North Korea. In Venezuela, the Marxist government's socialist policies have resulted in political repression, the starvation of children, and a massive refugee crisisthe biggest in the history of the Western hemisphere.

In Russia, the authoritarian regime of former KGB Colonel Vladimir Putin has embarked on a wholesale whitewashing of communism's historical record. Putin's brutal war on Ukraine is primarily based on Russian nationalist ideology, rather than that of the Soviet Union. Nonetheless, the failure of post-Soviet Russia to fully reckon with its oppressive Soviet past is likely one of the reasons why Putin's regime came to power, and engaged in its own atrocities.

In China, the Communist Party remains in power (albeit after having abandoned many of its previous socialist economic policies), and has become less and less tolerant of criticism of the mass murders of the Mao era (part of a more general turn towards greater repression). The government's brutal repression of the Uighur minority, and escalating suppression of dissent, even among Han Chinese, are just two aspects in which it seems bent on repeating some of its previous atrocities. Under the rule of Xi Jinping, the government has also increasingly reinstated socialist state control of the economy.

Here in the West, some socialists and others have attempted to whitewash the history of communism, and a few even attribute major accomplishments to the Soviet regime. Cathy Young has an excellent critique of such Soviet "nostalgia" in a 2021 Reason article.

In sum, we need Victims of Communism Day because we have never given sufficient recognition to the victims of the modern world's most murderous ideology or come close to fully appreciating the lessons of this awful era in world history. In addition, that ideology, and variants thereof, still have a substantial number of adherents in many parts of the world, and still retains considerable intellectual respectability even among many who do not actually endorse it. Just as Holocaust Memorial Day serves as a bulwark against the reemergence of fascism, so this day of observance can help guard against the return to favor of the only ideology with an even greater number of victims.

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November 7 as Victims of Communism Day - 2023 - Reason

The Fall of the Berlin Wall and the Fate of the West – Breakpoint – BreakPoint.org

November marks the anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. In 1989, this symbol of Communist tyranny came tumbling down, marking the end of a totalitarian nightmare. After the threat of Nazism was defeated, Communism turned a third of the world into a police state the likes of which had never been seen.

Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and Pope John Paul II recognized, in a clear-eyed way not shared by many other academic and political elites, that Marxisms blood-red banners meant not liberation but oppression. More than this, they saw that Communism was not only something that should be opposed, but that could be. Their collective strategies worked even faster than the most optimistic expected. As that deadly edifice of Communism tumbled down, its fractured walls meant a no-longer-divided Berlin, no more Stasi, no more secret arrests.

In the joy of that moment and the collapse of the Soviet Union two years later, famed political scientist Francis Fukuyama declared the End of History. He believed that the death of Communism was the final obstacle to the triumph of Enlightenment liberalism and democracy. He was, of course, mistaken.

Though we may not be living in Orwells 1984 or Huxleys Brave New World, the abdication of freedom and the embrace of historys worst ideals continues, and not just in China, Russia, and Iran. In England, silently praying in front of an abortion clinic can get a person arrested. According to a Pew Research report, a majority of young Americans prefer freedom from offense over freedom of speech. In pro-Hamas parades across the West, thousands have proclaimed that violence, oppression, and censorship are acceptable if the right groups are being harmed, oppressed, and silenced. The ideals of diversity and dissent have been reduced to slogans to signal our virtue, not realities to live out in practice. As a result, more and more power is granted to state, academic, corporate, and media authorities to rescue us from dangerous ideas, ironically in the name of diversity and inclusion.

Those people who are tearing down the posters of kidnapped Israeli kids are not replacing them with other images. They are just denying a space to speak. The younger, leftist crowd increasingly thinks of core freedoms, such as the freedom of speech, as questionable at best and as a dangerous excuse for hatred at worst. In America, we now debate whether some speech should be coerced. In Britain, though silent prayer can be illegal, calls for genocide are protected. A world in which we are free only insofar as we agree with those currently in power is a world thats not free at all.

During the twentieth century, the world moved forward on the inertia and inheritance Christianity gave to the West. This momentum, however, only lasted so long. Somewhere, during the long fight against the twin tyrannies of Fascism and Communism, we lost those fundamental beliefs and insights into humanity that grounded our ideals about freedom in the first place. Now, well into the twenty-first century, with this Judeo-Christian foundation stripped from beneath us, nothing remains to sustain the passion for liberty. Without a vision of ordered freedomwhat Os Guinness has rightly noted as a freedom for rather than just a freedom from the claim to rights and liberties are reduced to squabbles between various groups vying for power.

President Reagans epic call to Tear down this wall! will have been for nothing if something better is not built in its place. Western freedom cannot be preserved without a proper understanding of human nature, the understanding that birthed Western freedom in the first place. Only the description of reality offered in the Bible and confirmed by centuries of Christian reflection is robust enough for this task. If rooted only in the malleable ideas of the majority or on the passing fancies of those in power, our most precious liberties will collapse as surely as Communisms concrete boundaries did.

This Breakpoint was co-authored by Dr. Timothy Padgett. For more resources to live like a Christian in this cultural moment, go to breakpoint.org.

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The Fall of the Berlin Wall and the Fate of the West - Breakpoint - BreakPoint.org