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Communist Manifesto Today

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4 Reviews
BompaCrazy.com, 1964 - Communism - 143 pages
The Communist Manifesto was written in 1848 as an inflammatory outcry against capitalist exploitation of the working class. The Manifesto calls upon workers of the world to unite and revolt against their oppressors, to abolish private property and free enterprise, and to form a kind of workers' community in which everyone would have an equal share.
  

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it is a bout about communism man you should read it because its about communism man so yeah just do it man cuz its about being a communist man like we should all be like that carl guy he knew what he wanted with working together you know man he was just all like friendly man and people hated him for it he really just wanted everyone to be friends man just to get along but i guess in our world thats impossible man cuz we are always looking for answers to the universe man but what happens when we find it all out what happens when we learn all the answers man will we live forever will we stop existing as a species did we invent ignorance so our curiosity wont destroy us a species but if we learn the answer to everything we will no longer be ignorant but if we are no longer ignorant do we have a purpose will we cease to exist or is ignorance just something we've invented to help with it all in the end it doesn't even matter man cuz we are just living here in the moment and what happens in the future doesn't concern us but does it we just live our lives full of ignorance so we don't drift away in the sea of knowledge but our curiosity pulls us out into that sea and our ignorance anchors us here in reality what if the reason we don't know any other sentient species in the cosmos is because they have all destroyed themselves with knowledge what if they sought the answer to everything and stopped existing because of it man in the end none of this really matters cuz we are just happy the way we are and we don't need the answers to live on cuz at the end of the day we're all the same and thats just what really matters man thats all that matters. 

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I have always wanted to read this book.In my native village we studied karl Marxxs communism monifesta.It was my bible that is why i appreciate this newly rendered edition of the communist manifesto. The communist manifesto is truly amazing many of you are blided by the illusions of a modern society, this is an excellent book if are able to understand the underlying intricacies.It is beginning to show the age of its ideas but nevertheless life goes on. This book may have been thoroughly entertaining. It may have touched my heart. This may have been the purest form of communism but is the heart of a true genius. When i was seven i picked bananas in Honduras for the general good of civilization and man kind. It was hard work and i was going crazy banana after banana. The introduction by Chris Harman Designed especially for newer audiences, this bombastic, very indifferently priced edition of Marx's amazing work, will never be an international best-seller, but may also features a new glossary explaining difficult terms to readers.Growing up in the northern peninsula of south Africa was tough. This book is very structured. Karl Marx was a genius. Long live the Queen. 

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About the author (1964)

Karl Heinrich Marx, one of the fathers of communism, was born on May 5, 1818 in Trier, Germany. He was educated at a variety of German colleges, including the University of Jena. He was an editor of socialist periodicals and a key figure in the Working Man's Association. Marx co-wrote his best-known work, "The Communist Manifesto" (1848), with his friend, Friedrich Engels. Marx's most important work, however, may be "Das Kapital" (1867), an analysis of the economics of capitalism. He died on March 14, 1883 in London, England.

Friedrich Engels is perhaps best remembered as the confidant, colleague, and benefactor of Karl Marx. Born into a Calvinist family that owned fabric mills in the Rhineland and had business interests in Manchester, England, Engels joined the family business at age 16; he never had a formal university education. Despite his family's industrial background, Engels was sympathetic to the poverty of the working masses. At age 18 he published an attack on industrial poverty, and later joined the Hegelian movement that so influenced Marx and bothered conservative Prussian authorities. Engels first met Marx in 1842, while Marx was editor of a radical newspaper in Cologne. However, they did not establish their lifelong friendship until they met again in Paris two years later. Engels published several works related to economics, the first of which, Outlines of a Critique of Political Economy (1844), attempted to reconcile Hegelian philosophy with the principles of political economy. His second book, The Condition of the Working Class in England (1845), was a damning description and condemnation of the poverty generated by the Industrial Revolution. Engels also co-authored three major works with Marx, the most important being the Communist Manifesto (1948). Engels also wrote several historical works, which are more important to historians than to economists. These include The Peasant War in Germany (1850), Germany: Revolution and Counter-Revolution (1851), and The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (1884). In general, these works are more descriptive than theoretical, and they closely parallel Marx's views on industrialization and class struggle. In addition to being a friend of Marx, Engels was his prime benefactor for a number of years. During their early years in London, beginning in 1849, the Marx family was nearly destitute, and it was only through the generosity of Engels that they prevailed. Engels was also responsible for the publication of Marx's Das Kapital. Before his death, Marx was only able to complete the first volume of this work, and so Engels edited and arranged for the publication of the last two volumes after Marx's death. Engels was an engaging and thoughtful writer. It was perhaps his great fortune and misfortune that he was connected so closely to Marx. On the one hand, he was responsible for bringing much of Marx's work to fruition in his role as benefactor and editor. On the other hand, the shadow of Marx eclipsed some of the exposure that Engels's own ideas and contributions might have had.

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