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Why Did The Communist Regimes Fail In Eastern Europe? - YouTube
Channel: The Infographics Show
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Today we're taking a look at the final chapters
of the Cold War and Communism's inevitable
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downfall across Eastern Europe.
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Despite the largest military alliance in human
history and the ever-present threat of nuclear
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war, in the end, it was not opposing force
of arms or nuclear annihilation that defeated
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the Soviet Union and its allies...so what
was it exactly?
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First, it’s worth mentioning that Communism
and Stalinism, or Stalin's version of Communism,
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are not one and the same.
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In fact, practically no nation on Earth every
actually achieved the true ideals of Communism,
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falling far short and often falling into despotism
or fascism.
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So what exactly is Communism, how is it different
from Stalinism, and where did it come from?
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Communism's roots lie in the minds of two
German political philosophers, Karl Marx and
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Friedrich Engels.
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Marx and Engels grew up in the heyday of imperialist
Europe, with the great powers jostling for
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world domination and sparking proxy wars across
their vast colonial empires.
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The Industrial Revolution was in full swing
at that time, and workers flocked to the cities
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to work in factories and industrial plants.
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The Industrial Revolution and its many technological
advances exponentially increased a worker's
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productivity, but as Marx and Engels noted,
the worker himself received little of this
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extra benefit.
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Though a worker was now ten to twenty times
more productive, his wages did not reflect
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this increase, meaning that the only profiteer
of his greatly increased productivity was
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the factory owner.
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Marx and Engels saw this deepening economic
divide as fundamentally unjust and tyrannical,
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and in 1848 wrote The Communist Manifesto.
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In the Manifesto, Marx and Engels proclaimed
that the history of mankind was a history
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of class struggles, outlining how every civilization
has existed with an oppressed working majority
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exploited by the oppressive, wealthy minority.
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This state of affairs, they said, would inevitably
lead to a worker's revolution as the proletariat,
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or working class, would eventually realize
their own potential and seize the means of
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production for themselves from the bourgeoisie,
or wealthy elite.
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The Manifesto would go on to lay down the
rules of an ideal society, from the abolition
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of child labour, to free public education,
nationalization of credit and banking systems,
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and a progressive income tax.
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Thus were the roots of Communism born.
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Ultimately the goal of a Communist society
is one in which the means of production are
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equally shared by all.
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While some extremists would call for complete
wealth redistribution, Marx and Engels' original
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vision was one where Communism created a classless,
wealth-less society, and everyone has equal
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opportunity to access credit, education, or
the physical resources required to prosper.
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Though often compared to Socialism, Communism
as envisioned by Marx and Engels is an evolution
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of Socialism, with Socialism itself merely
a step in the direction of Communism.
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By fully automating industry, Karl Marx envisioned
a future utopia where everyone was liberated
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from the actual necessity of “earning a
living”, and thus individuals measured their
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wealth not by money or material possessions,
but by the amount of free time they have to
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pursue their passions.
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Karl Marx and Frederick Engels would lay out
very lofty ideals for their Communist utopia,
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and though they would fade from popularity
for nearly a quarter of a century, their ideas
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would be resurrected in the late 1800s, where
they would help plant the seeds of revolution
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in the Russian people.
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Suffering under the yoke of an oppressive
and exploitative Tsarist regime, Vladimir
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Lenin and his Bolsheviks would seize power
in 1917 and begin to lay the groundwork down
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for a Marxist government.
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But suffering a series of strokes, Lenin would
die just a few years later, leaving a power
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vacuum in Russia with two sides vying for
supremacy: Leon Trotsky, close confidant of
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Lenin and sworn enemy of Joseph Stalin, whom
he warned publicly would destroy Lenin's vision
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of a truly Communist Russia.
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Unfortunately for the young Soviet Union,
it would be Stalin who would rise to power
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and Trotsky would see himself removed from
post after post until finally being ousted
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from the Communist Party and exiled from the
Soviet Union.
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With Joseph Stalin's rise, Karl Marx and Vladimir
Lenin's hopes for a truly Communist utopia
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would die, and the western world would forever
reject the idea of Communism as a valid political
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theory.
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Rather than reducing government and working
towards nearly complete non-governance, Joseph
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Stalin would instead expand the reach of government
as he completely federalized most of the Soviet
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Union's industries.
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Where Marx and Lenin had envisioned a worker's
utopia that prioritized civil liberties and
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an open, transparent government, Stalin instead
created a society where civil liberties were
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stripped away while the population was aggressively
monitored by secret police for dissent.
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By creating an oppressive regime, Stalin guaranteed
from the day he rose to power that Communism
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would ultimately fail.
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So why did Communism fail exactly?
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It’s almost impossible to narrow down to
any number of specific reasons as the story
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of the Cold War is one fraught with political
nuance, but there were running trends across
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the entire Soviet Bloc that ensured its downfall.
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One of the biggest flaws in Stalinist Communism
was the focus on productivity and efficiency.
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With the dawning of the computer age, technological
progress began to increase exponentially,
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but rather than attempt to innovate, the Soviet
Union and its allies instead practiced a doctrine
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of 'tried and true', attempting to make the
processes of yesterday as efficient as possible.
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Innovation is born of risk, but risk affects
production quotas and that was, in Stalin's
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Soviet-Bloc, an unacceptable outcome.
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While many breakthrough technologies that
define our modern age actually had their roots
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in the Soviet Union, such as the laser, Soviet
scientists did not know how to properly market
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new technologies and lacked the open, competitive
market system that breeds the innovators and
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visionaries of a capitalist society.
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But such inward focus extended past just efficiency
and production quotas- in response to an antagonistic
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West, the Soviet Union and allies chose to
turn their focus inwards and ignore a changing
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world.
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This myopic focus on the self attempted to
shut the world away, but just past the Soviet-Bloc's
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borders the world was changing, quickly, and
Eastern Europeans began to yearn for that
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change themselves.
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With freedom of expression severely curtailed,
and art discouraged or forced to be approved
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by committees who judged art's merits solely
on if it served the state's goals or not,
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Eastern Europeans were yearning for the rights
and social revolutions they saw happening
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across the Western world.
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As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. marched on Washington,
many Soviet-Bloc citizens watched on illegal
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broadcasts or recordings and found more in
common than not.
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With Eastern Europeans yearning for the right
to expression, Stalinist economic policies
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would inevitably hasten the coming revolutions.
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Though Stalin was a student of Lenin and Marx,
he failed to understand what both men knew
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already- true Communism was an act of ongoing
evolution that would require decades if not
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centuries of slow, steady change.
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When Stalin attempted to implement Communism's
fundamental tenet of worker equality, he would
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completely ignore what Lenin and Marx understood
about worker equality.
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In Stalin's eyes, Communism meant that a neurosurgeon
and a factory worker should be paid the same
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wage as equals- and while this is technically
true about Communism, what Stalin did not
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understand was that in Lenin/Marxist Communism,
the workers would be equal because they would
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be liberated from the necessity of earning
a living through automation of industry, and
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thus would be equally free to pursue neurosurgery
or work at a factory if that is what either
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man's passions were.
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But Stalin either missed or ignored this crucial
step, and by equalizing wages, Stalin ensured
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that the Soviet Union and allies would exasperate
a lack of innovation and ferment dissent amongst
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the people who would be denied any opportunity
at advancing past their lot in life.
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Eventually the world's greatest social experiment
would fail and the Communist order around
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the world would fall.
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Only nations such as China who practice Communism
more in name than actual spirit would continue
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past the collapse of the Soviet Union.
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Haunted by a myopic isolationist view of the
world, fermenting growing dissent by oppression,
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and refusing to innovate, Stalinist Communism
was doomed from the moment it began, but as
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some historians have remarked, the inevitable
end of the Cold War could already be seen
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when the first American Pepsi went on sale
at Red Square in 1973.
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So, what do you think about Stalin's implementation
of Communism?
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With the dawning of artificial intelligence
and smart robotics, is Karl Marx's and Frederick
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Engels' vision of society, freed from the
necessity of earning a living by automating
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industry, finally achievable?
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If so, would a society where art and education
are prioritized and individuals are free to
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pursue their passions truly be a utopia?
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Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
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Also, be sure to check out our other video
called Russia vs the United States!
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Thanks for watching, and, as always, don’t
forget to like, share, and subscribe.
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See you next time!
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