Marx and Private OwnershipMarx and Private Ownership. Marx and private ownershipMarx believes that private ownership is unjust because it creates an imbalance in society, that stretchs from unequal distribution, exploitation, and inevitably ending in class conflict. Marx belives that the �liberal’ claim for freedom, development, and progression for the entrupenur, with an open market economy is complex, because basically it divides the mode of production, and the force of production. Wage labourers are forced to work for the middle class, abandoning their freedom, and their rights, and losing total control of that that they produce. Wage labourers are not in control of their produce, and they are exploited by the owners of large cooperations, who are evidently the minority in society. Marx believed that the liberal claim not to mix politics with economics is also complex, in that though they claim that its is a separate sphere, they still support capitalism, and the domination
This Marx and private ownership claim was made by the most recent major mass movement in the political and social sciences, and it was formulated as a reaction to the bourgeois “Marx’s” opposition to any form of socialist state capitalism. The Marx campaign was led by the theoreticians, especially the Marxists, who believed:
The theory of the Marxists was not as radical as the Marxist position on imperialism, socialism or any other social system; but the theory of the Marxists was as complex as Marx’s! The Marxist theory of socialism, capitalist and communist, was one that argued for a world capitalist industrial complex, and for a social market that could be used to develop a truly free system of production, with no restrictions! Such a system would not only create an international communist society, but it would also be able to take all possible forms of exploitation and class struggle and create the conditions for more and more free markets, just as Mao and Stalin did.
The Marxists had also a great desire that the social and economic system of this time could be made more open and democratic, especially since, just as Lenin believed, so Marx believed that under social and economic conditions, democracy and freedom can be the most successful and progressive forms of state organization. As long ago is the time as Marx understood socialist society. Marx called for the establishment of a democratic and socialist class consciousness to be realized, since the proletariat, like all classes, can never truly be taken advantage of even when they have already been deprived of their privileges, as under capitalism. Marx advocated the formation of a democratic social organization so that under Socialism it would be necessary to introduce a new type of government under socialist rule, and to provide a system of economic and social security. In fact, Marx thought that he himself was willing to accept the idea of the creation and development of a new social organization under capitalism, in order to show that socialism can not be so much the dictatorship of capitalism, as the full freedom of the workers. In addition, Marx believed that it was possible for the class struggle to emerge in order to build a successful political revolution, by establishing the party that would build up the class consciousness of the people, or so-called ‘revolutionary’ party, in the future Socialist Party.
The same is true of socialism: under socialism and communism, it is possible only for the class struggle to develop in its entirety. In the case of socialism and communism, it is possible only for the whole class to go on growing up under the dictatorship and domination of all its major rivals.
The Marxist Party of Cuba
The Cuban Communist Party of Cuba (CHCF) is a political, economic, literary, literary, educational, and ideological party which represents a new form of communist state system founded on Marxist theories, and who has been led by the Socialist Party, whose founding principles are:
Marx, Lenin, Luxemburg and other Socialists developed the theory of socialism as a way to combat the oppression of the working class and to organize people into a communist party, that is to say, a socialist organization. The theory was developed by the Marxist Internationalist Program, and the Socialist International, whose name became the Party of Socialism and Bolshevism. The socialist constitution became the Party in 1961 and the socialist national party was founded in 1986.
The CHCF has been leading the party for over forty years since the beginning of the Communist Party of Cuba. The Chacro Family, a family which lived in the south until 1846, was the primary branch of the Party of Socialism and Bolshevism in Cuba. The party’s main members are two leading party bosses, Eduardo Pareto (author of “State and Revolution” and who became Chairman of the Socialist Party of Cuba in 1959 and his successor in 1990), and Eduardo Márquez-C. Sánchez (author of “Istituto de