
Communism, Control, and Our Future
The desire to control others has always been with us – and it is getting worse:
The ominous final line of an important new history of Communism says this: “Far from dead, Communism as a governing template seems only to be getting started.” I refer to the 530-page book, To Overthrow the World: The Rise and Fall and Rise of Communism by American historian Sean McMeekin (Basic Books, 2024).
There are of course entire libraries filled with books about socialism, Marxism, the Soviet Union, and so on. In my own personal library I have several hundred volumes on these topics. But this volume is one of the newest and best volumes available so far. It offers a sweeping yet detailed history of Communism covering the past 175 years or so.
To demonstrate the relevance of this book, let me begin by noting two recent events that have taken place in America. Zohran Mamdani just became the Democratic nominee for Mayor of New York City. The hard-core socialist is right up there with Bernie Sanders and AOC in radical progressivism. President Trump rightly branded him a “Communist Lunatic.” https://www.foxnews.com/politics/zohran-mamdani-secures-victory-most-total-votes-nyc-mayoral-primary-history
But in contrast, the Texas government just passed a Bill – 89(R) SB 24 – that requires the school curriculum to teach about the history and horrors of Communism, contrasting this godless ideology with the vision of the American Founding Fathers. https://victimsofcommunism.org/texas-passes-law-mandating-education-on-communism/
That is a great move, and a volume such as this one would fit in nicely there. The book covers all the major topics, with detailed and well-documented chapters on the early socialist utopians, Karl Marx, the Bolshevik coup, the terror reigns of Lenin, Stalin and others, the Red Guards, the Khmer Rouge and so much more.
I will speak more to this very important volume in future articles, but here I want to focus on the book’s Preface and Epilogue where he highlights what I mention in my title: the issue of control in Communist societies. The opening paragraphs of the Preface say this:
It is now more than three decades since the fall of the Berlin Wall and subsequent collapse of the USSR prompted Francis Fukuyama to proclaim the “End of History.” Like most Americans who lived through those heady and exciting times, I felt a surge of pride as one Eastern Bloc country after another discarded single-party Communist rule for pluralism and political freedom —even Russia itself, which for a time seemed just as eager to embrace the West. For the first time, Soviet archives were thrown open to Western researchers such as myself, who happily descended on them to probe the secrets of Soviet and global Communism. Confident postmortems of Communism then filled the airwaves, with a sense of relief and “goodbye to all that.” At the height of American triumphalism in 2001, the historian Richard Pipes described his short Communism: A History as not only “an introduction to Communism” but also “at the same time, its obituary.”
Twenty years later, things look rather different. Russia may no longer be Communist, but it is ruled by Vladimir Putin, a proud and unrepentant former KGB officer. Joseph Stalin is more admired in Russia today than at any other time since his death in 1953, his manifold crimes against the peoples of the Soviet Union now either forgiven or forgotten. Since the Ukraine crisis of 2019 and the Russia-Ukraine war that broke out in February 2022, relations between Russia and the West have been thrown into the deep freeze, frostier by some measures than at the height of the Cold War, with nearly all trade and travel cut off. Meanwhile, thrown off its perch by the 9/11 attacks, ineffectual “forever war” military interventions, deindustrialization, and debts eroding the value of the dollar, the United States has bled prestige in uncanny parallel with the return of Russian military power to the world stage and the rise of Communist China in economic power and global influence. With the COVID-19 lockdowns of 2020-2022, the China model spread globally, as once inviolable rights, from freedom of speech and dissent to freedom of movement and travel, were temporarily abandoned in the West. For many young westerners, Communism is no longer a cause banished from mainstream discourse for its association with totalitarian regimes, for they have no living memory of them. Liberal democratic capitalism seems bereft of energy, if not moribund, while Chinese Communism rapidly assimilates much of the world. How did this happen, and why did no one see it coming?
What follows is an attempt to grapple with this question, and to approach it with a greater sense of humility than I might have done in those heady early years of the post-Communist era. Owing to several decades of historical research in partly open Chinese, mostly open Eastern Bloc, and until recently relatively open Soviet archives, we also know far more today than in the past about how Communism worked in practice, and about why, and exactly how, so many Communist regimes fell—while others endured—between 1989 and 1991. There was nothing fated about the collapse of Soviet power that allowed the Eastern Bloc Communist satellites and the three Baltic Republics to spin free from Moscow’s orbit in 1989, and that prompted the collapse of the USSR itself two years later—the cause of Fukuyama’s premature gloating—nor in the violent reassertion of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) control in Tiananmen Square earlier in 1989, which should have rendered his thesis null on arrival. Much as we like to imagine that Communism failed because of a cascading groundswell of heroic popular opposition from below, it was actually the disappearance of coercion from above that counted. More than any other system of government known to man, Communist rule required the strong hand of the military and heavily armed security services, all under strict party control. Once the regime’s sword was lifted, Communist parties crumbled quickly; if the sword remained, the party did too.
And in the Epilogue, McMeekin looks at the “Strange Non-Death of Communism”. In it he reminds us of how recent developments in Communist China along with the West’s response to Covid proves that the ugly allure of Communism is alive and well. He shows how closely connected the two in fact are. He is again worth quoting from at length:
With the COVID-19 lockdowns of 2020-2022, the China model of Communist statist surveillance crashed into Europe, the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand as once inviolable Western freedoms – of movement, travel, and association, of speech and robust debate over controversial public policies – were abandoned one by one. Even “social distancing,” the now much-mocked craze of 2020 – which, by making it illegal for humans to sit or congregate closer than six feet (in the United States) or one meter (most of Europe), shut down public schools and all but destroyed social industries, from cinemas, concert halls, and theatres to churches, gyms, restaurants and nightclubs – was a CCP import. . . . [It] was a Chinese Communist policy imposed in 2002-2003 in response to outbreaks of avian flu and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS). It was quietly, owing to CCP influence, incorporated into pandemic guidelines by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the American Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 2004, reversing decades of progressively more humane – and scientifically sound – policies on mitigating disease outbreaks. “Lockdown” had absolutely no basis in the Western tradition, not even in the more credulous times of the Black Death, when sick people might have been quarantined against their will, but never the entire healthy population.
Social distancing lockdown, however, was a logical outgrowth of the statist population controls embraced by twentieth-century Communist regimes, such as the one in China where it first emerged….
He continues:
After heady moments in 1989 and 1991 when it appeared that the fall of Communism would usher in an era of greater civil liberties and freedoms worldwide, most of the Western world is now converging instead on a hybrid Chinese Communist model of statist governance and social life. Private (or semi-private) social media and other tech companies are harnessed by the state to track, monitor, censor, and control private communications, speech, and political activity, mostly behind the scenes, although with periodic high-profile crackdowns to scare would-be dissidents into compliance. The CCP’s social credit system, which sees those who fall afoul of the government or social media consensus denied access to schooling, travel, banking, or credit, has already been applied en masse to the “COVID unvaccinated” across the Western world, along with other dissidents. Such restrictions have now begun to extend into the banking system in the West. Funds raised to feed Canadian truckers participating in an outdoor winter protest against COVID vaccine mandates in early 2022, for example, were frozen by Canadian authorities in early 2022. When former Brexit Party chairman and European Parliament member Nigel Farage faced closure of his bank accounts, or “debanking,” in the summer of 2023, he believed it was because of his political views. Similar crackdowns affected British and American journalists critical of the West’s Ukraine policy in 2023.
It is not hard to imagine “debanking” or other types of persecution being applied in the near future to people whose views dissent from the approved consensus of Western social and governing elites on a wider range of topics, such as “climate change,” immigration, race, sexual orientation, or gender identification. It might once have sufficed for intellectual orthodoxy-enforcers that dissenters had trouble finding employment in government, in academe, or at white shoe corporate and law firms, but social access can now be restricted to many other areas of public life: not only the closure of bank accounts or refusal of service, but also social media bans, the seizure of funds collected via online platforms such as GoFundMe, the denial of passport or travel rights, or even, in some cases, interrogation and arrest. Americans have thus far been spared the cruder Communist injustice of “expropriation” of their assets, and the horrors of Stalin- or Mao-style Gulag camps and state-induced famines. In the social and intellectual sphere, however, the echoes of Cultural Revolution-style Communist totalitarianism have become too powerful—and painful—to ignore. Because modern-day thought commissars often work in the private sector (or for companies aligned with state intelligence), these new Western forms of social control may be more insidious than the cruder methods of physical intimidation and violence deployed by the NKVD, the Stasi, and Mao’s Red Guards: many victims deprived of their jobs, funds, reputations, or basic civil rights may not even know who their accusers are. Far from dead, Communism as a governing template seems only to be getting started.
And if that is so, then the eternal vigilance required to ensure the continuation of freedom is needed now as much as ever. And a book like this is part of what we need to make sure we remain free.
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I think it is a bit misguided to talk about a resurgence in “communism”. Real Communism was all about overthrowing Capitalism and installing a proletariat government. In the West in 2025 we face a different beast. What we DO have is a new form of Totalitarianism, and the irony is that many of these neototalitarians are hardline capitalists… As a Canadian I witnessed firsthand this neototalitarianism in action as in 2022 attending a church during Covid restrictions here in Québec, we were raided by 3 police squad cars, like it was a Hells Angels bunker. Yet there were grandmas attending and kids running around. I think we narrowly avoided huge fines that some Canadian churches got by pointing out that the police involved in this raid could face prosecution for interrupting a church service (a forgotten article, 176, under Canadian Criminal Code). Had to finish the service outside in the snow with –10C temps…
May be of interest that I recently put online a review of FA Hayek’s Road to Serfdom.
https://www.samizdat.qc.ca/cosmos/sc_soc/sc_po/Hayek_PG.htm
Thanks Paul.
A distinguished English conservative philosopher Michael Oakeshott (1901–1990) famously denounced Marxism as “this greatest of all political cribs”. He said: “No other technique has so imposed itself upon the world as if it were concrete knowledge; none has created so vast an intellectual proletariat with nothing but its technique to lose.” [Source: Michael Oakeshott, Rationalism in Politics and Other Essays (London: Methuen, 1962), p. 26.]
Thanks for that John.
I understand what Paul Gosselin means when says (in his comment above) that the new form of totalitarianism stalking the West differs in certain respects from orthodox Marxism.
Marx, Engels and Lenin were chiefly preoccupied with economics and aimed to overthrow capitalism and replace it with a government-directed economy supposedly run in the interests of the people.
Marxism, however, evolved — some would say mutated — into other forms, the most prevalent one being cultural Marxism.
This important strand of left-wing thought was derived from two sources.
One was the Italian Marxist theorist, Antonio Gramsci.
The other was a group of Marxist ideologies associated with the Institute for Social Research founded in 1923 at the University of Frankfurt am Main — the so-called Frankfurt School. Its leading lights included György Lukács, Carl Grünberg, Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, Wilhelm Reich and Herbert Marcuse.
The Canadian government’s hostility to Christianity, described by Paul Gosselin, is to a great degree the fruit of cultural Marxism.
You can see similar manifestations of this type of thinking across the Western world as governments, egged on by our left-wing intellectual elites, restrict our religious freedoms, undermine marriage and the family, and indoctrinate the young with LGBT and ‘woke’ ideology.
In 2010, Scottish conservative Gerald Warner declared that, in Europe, “we already inhabit the Gulag”.
He added: “The Berlin Wall did not ‘fall’ — it was just moved further west.”
Thanks John. Yes I fully concur that cultural Marxism is part of the ongoing Communist mindset. The three American politicians that I briefly mentioned in my piece are not only full-on cultural Marxists, but their hatred of capitalism is also fully obvious (even though like most, they are quite happy to enjoy the fruits of the free market). That things like woke capitalism and the like exist do not negate the fact that modern forms of totalitarianism are still very much in the Marxist mode. But I would recommend that folks get the volume by McMeekin and see how he makes this case. My partial review here would not have given it proper justice.
It is true that the influence of cultural Marxism (Gramsci and Frankfurt School) has leaked into Western universities and subsequently leaked into popular culture. But the neototalitarians presently dominant in the West (the Davos sect, the Trilateral Commission, etc.) are channelling totalitarianism from other (non-marxist) sources such as HG Wells, Julian Huxley (UN co-founder) Canadian Maurice Strong and Henry Kissinger. People like Karl Schwab, Bill Gates, other Big Tech CEOs, Yuval Harrari, are all for this neototalitarianism, typically express this view in political terms with their approval of a New World Order (planetary government). Their utter hatred of populist or nationalist movements (Brexit, MAGA, Canadian Freedom Convoy, Gilet Jaunes in France) follows logically from their commitment to New World Order. Populist or nationalist movements then become OBSTACLES to their objective… This must be taken into account as this is the primary ideological source for all those Davos pawns presently in power in most of the West.
Here’s a press file (English and French articles) on the multiple expressions of neototalitarianism
https://www.samizdat.qc.ca/DossierCovid19/nouveautotalitarisme.htm
Thanks again Paul.
Mr “Two-Tier” Keir Starmer, our UK Prime Minister, famously said he was more at home in Davos than in Westminster – Davos, the HQ of the World Economic Forum famous for the dictum “You will own nothing and be happy”. I think the king is of similar mind.
Quite so John.
I realize I should have explained one allusion in my previous reply, that is referring to HG Wells as totalitarian, yet is mostly known for his science fiction novels like War of the Worlds. But Wells also wrote political pamphlets, one of these being his The Open Conspiracy: Blue Prints for a World Revolution published in 1928. It also turns out that the expression “The New World Order” was actually coined by Wells as it was the title to another globalist pamphlet published in 1939. And remember those political figures at the beginning of the Covid crisis hinting that such a crisis demanded “planetary cooperation and coordination”? In any case, there is a chance that CS Lewis’ NICE organisation in That Hideous Strength was actually inspired by HG Wells globalist pamphlets. There is a passage in THS (chap. 10, section 2) which indicates that Lewis viewed the NICE as a global organisation.
“Even the vague idea of escaping to America which, in a simpler age, comforted so many a fugitive, was denied him. He had already read in the papers the warm approval of the N.I.C.E. and all its works which came from the United States and from Russia. Some poor tool just like himself had written them. Its claws were embedded in every country: on the liner, if he should ever succeed in sailing; on the tender, if he should ever make some foreign port; its ministers would be waiting for him.”
Since is it known that Lewis had read Wells novels (a number of allusions to Wells appear in the Space Trilogy), chances are the had also read Wells’ Globalist pamphlets.
Yes Paul I am sure he would have. As would have Chesterton.
The manifestation of Totalitarianism we are witnessing today through the likes of the World Economic Forum with their 2030 agenda and the World Health Organisation with their global control of the health of the human population, is the stage building for the upcoming world leader ie. the anti christ, referred to in the Bible.
Communism, Marxism, Totalitarianism, Facism, Globalism and the like are all Godless and evil.
Individual Freedom on the other hand is a God given gift.
Take comfort, we know how it ends, God wins the fight.
Thanks Erik.