At least Leninist states were equal opportunity oppressors, guaranteeing all the rights to be arrested, tortured, murdered, and impoverished. Russia’s decrepit Romanoff dynasty looks pretty good compared to Lenin’s Bolshevik state. Similar was the result of most other Leninist revolutions.
By numbers, Mao is probably the greatest mass killer in history, yet he is still venerated in the People’s Republic of China. Beijing has lifted its people out of poverty only by rejecting Maoism and turning toward the market and capitalist West. Cambodia’s Pol Pot committed the greatest proportional slaughter, most likely killing around 2 million people, but possibly as many as 3 million, out of a population of about 7.8 million. The Killing Fields should be visited for their horror to be truly grasped. North Korea is perhaps the world’s most tyrannical society today, with ruthless repression, a mini-Gulag, and a rigid social classification system. It also warrants a visit from any enthusiastic communist.
Lenin: The Heritage We (Don’t) Renounce illustrates well the importance of individuals in history. Lenin was charismatic, determined, prescient, confident, and ruthless. More than anything else, he understood how and when to use power. Without him, the Bolsheviks, a minority among revolutionary wannabes — let alone the larger population — likely would have faded from history.
After ascending to the pinnacle of power, Lenin suffered a series of strokes beginning in 1922. He died a century ago, only 53 years old. And his best student, in terms of gaining and using power, won an extended political struggle: Joseph Stalin completed Lenin’s mission, solidifying the Soviet state and spreading revolution wherever the latter’s armies roamed. Even if Lenin had second thoughts at his choice of Stalin as party general secretary — the authenticity of the former’s supposed last testament remains in doubt — they were over Stalin’s incivility, not his brutality.
Bush calls Lenin: The Heritage We (Don’t) Renounce an “exhilarating collection.” That’s true, in the sense that most people would call a root canal an “exhilarating procedure.” The book performs, however, at least one useful function: It reminds us that even the worst ideas sometimes persist, despite repeated flagrant and costly refutations.
The persistence of Lenin’s nostrums should energize reform efforts within our constitutional and democratic order that respect human life, dignity, and liberty. The editors opine that their product is intended “to help liberate the old Ilyich from the musty, petrifying solitude of his mausoleum.” That is a worthy objective. It’s time to bury him. Literally. And forever put behind us more than a century of mass repression and murder in the name of the proletariat.