This book reads like a Mr. Toads wild ride featuring: the bullet point basics of Marxist thinking and theory, mini biographies of Marx, Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Ho Chi Min, and more, as well as post-it note histories of Marxist revolutions, Marxist states, and the myriad atrocities, including mass murder, and famine etc. committed under their sanction.
It sounds ridiculous to cover all of that in one volume, but it’s so well done, that it ends up being a bountiful feast of nutritious food for thought.
My personal history with Marxism goes back to my earliest childhood.
My parents were 1960’s era radicals.
We lived in a commune.
My mom went to Cuba to support the revolution when I was a baby.
My dad was an activist Marxist professor (aka drug dealer) at the University of Illinois during the summer of love.
My family harbored Marxist revolutionaries from domestic and international organizations in our home throughout the 60s and 70s.
Then the 80s happened.
My dad went to work at GM after he got out of prison, and my mom ditched politics for psychotherapy and new age spirituality.
We moved to Lansing Michigan, a rust belt university/factory town, where academic Marxism and trade unionism were as abundant as filthy muddy snow and opaque gray overcast 🌫 (yes that’s an overcast emoji and coincidentally the official logo for Lansing).
As a teen, the tiered old weirdo Marxist activists (with the occasional chomo strewn in there for good measure) would show up at our parties and punk shows trying to convert us with their lame newspapers and brainwashed rhetoric.
When I went to art school in San Francisco in the early 90s, I didn’t actually make much art, but I sure did try to look smart by reading Frankfurt school post-Marxist post-modern critical theory.
Or at least I tried to.
That shit was almost entirely unintelligible.
Then, right around 2000, someone, or actually sort of everyone, declared communism dead, and Marx irrelevant.
The rhetoric of dialectical materialism (diamat) instantaneously became “obsolescent Sanskrit”.
PoMo theory was (correctly) reveled to be an elaborate, nonsensical, pseudo intellectual, undergraduate mating strategy.
And just like that.
It was over.
Done ✅
I guess that had a lot to do with the collapse of the USSR, and the defunding of communist satellite states like Cuba and Viet Nam, and the near total reification of China into the capitalist juggernaut that it is today.
Right around the same time, Ronald Regan became a posthumous cowboy saint, and Google and Facebook “democratized the media.”
And like WOW man.
We’re living in a capitalist utopia.
I distinctly remember feeling somewhat uneasy about all of that.
I remember thinking that Soviet and Maoist governments were NOT synonymous with Marx, and maybe the left was chucking the baby out with the bath water by joining in with the wholesale rejection of Marx based on the atrocities and ultimate failures of those states.
But in retrospect, I was simply WAY too distracted by my 15 hour a day job, and the terrifying political and cultural aftermath of 911, and the manic gold rush of the pre 2008 Southern California housing market, and the Great Recession, and Game of Thrones etc to pay any of those ideas too much never mind.
Plus we elected Obama and America was a ‘post-racist technocracy’, so fuck it right?
And then suddenly TRUMP 😳
And he’s using Twitter like a cross between Andrew ‘Dice’ Clay and Joseph Gobbles.
And it’s WORKING!
IT’S WORKING!!!!
People are actually believing that nonsense.
All those lumpen proletariat types in the fly over states that the left pretty much took for granted and left for dead went mass MAGA and Kid Rock became the new poet laureate.
And like, nobody, NOBODY on the left can think clearly or do ANYTHING about any of it.
There’s no critical theory or precise language to deconstruct what’s happening, there’s no ideas or methodology or organization of resistance.
Just a bunch of pussy hats and Burnie Bro’s.
Revisiting Marx, even in this hypo-manic fast forward from, suddenly feels useful and fresh again.
Don’t get me wrong.
I’m not feeling compelled to grab a red book and revolt.
But aspects of Marxist critique are prescient and still useful AF!
Maybe more so today than ever.
It’s true.
Many of the right’s most histrionic criticisms of Marxism actually did happen (and then some).
And they were legitimately god awful.
Like, I actually get why people were so uptight about containing the spread of communism in the Cold War.
Marx omitted the clearly important “thou shalt not kill” injunction, and that ended up being a catastrophe of the highest order, no if ands or buts.
But conversely.
Many of the left’s most outlandish predictions are also coming true.
Capitalism does currently seem like a mindless, veraciously hungry machine that is devouring the earth, with polar bears and ice caps as an appetizer.
And, I can SO relate to the observation that sufficient free time, fair wages, medical care and education are worthy values for a society.
And I actually really really don’t want to be crushed under the stone wheel of wage slavery.
Particularly as I approach retirement age, with around 200k in student debt, and not one penny saved.
I guess the book is still open.
I hope we find a (peaceful, non violent) way to synthesize the dialectic between personal freedom and communal security.
Can someone smarter than me get to work on that?
Hurry please.