Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

I Love History

One hundred years ago today, the most audacious revolution in history took place in Russia. Vladimir Lenin and his Bolsheviks imagined a world completely remade, on the principles of justice, equality, and solidarity. They imagined a world where everyone works together for the common good, free from the class divisions that tore Russia apart, and continue to tear the world apart. The workers would no longer have to obey their bosses, women would not have to obey their husbands, and everyone would live in true freedom and equality.

They imagined a state that was controlled by the common workers, not the powerful property owning elite.

Regardless of what happened next, and why, we can say that largely in the hundred years since, the dream itself has been destroyed. Today we are taught that we cannot imagine a new form of society, only make minor, superficial changes to what we have. But what is life without a dream? When we awake from a beautiful dream, to the harsh reality of the world, do we vow to never dream again?

Oh, and also, let's not put Stalin in charge next time.
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
hunkalove · 70-79, M
Mostly what they imagined was what every politician imagines, a world where they can tell everyone else what to do and they can live the easy life. Communism is a great ideal, but it could never work.
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
firefall · 61-69, M
@hunkalove I agree, Communism has been pretty comprehensively shown not to work. But because their attempted solution didnt work, doesn't make the problem they were trying to address less real, or less in need of a solution.
firefall · 61-69, M
@Longpatrol90 and are no longer remotely Communist, except as a figleaf