A reader on Arnold Kling’s blog asks this interesting
question about his three axes model of political language as it applies to
communism versus conservatism.
“how does conservative opposition
to Communism (in the second half of the 20th century) fit on the
civilization-barbarianism axis? I’m not sure that the Soviet Union or communist
China are really thought of as “barbarians”. It seems weird that the main competitor
in a space race can be a “barbarian”.”
I’ve been thinking whether there are key concepts that lie
at the root of the axes Arnold has identified. I’ve been considering whether the
desire for order explains the civilization/barbarism axis, autonomy
for the libertarian freedom/coercion axis and equality for the liberal
oppressor/oppressed axis. When the question came up about how Communism falls
into this I thought at first that this might refute my attempt to identify the underlying
premises. I say this because a totalitarian regime seeks order too although it
is not based on the religion or tradition foundation that conservatives favor.
However, I’d say the ultimate purpose of the order communism imposes is to
achieve equality. “From each according to his ability to each according to his
needs” is the statement that captures the intent behind communism. Anyway, food
for thought.
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