Soren wrote on Mar 4
th, 2011 at 10:23am:
I think fighting for the control of territory and resources is common to all societies. To say that the working class is destined to lead the world is not.
Very true. No one assumes that the proletariat will take over the bourgeoisie anymore. No one believes in a proletariat anymore. The economy has changed.
Fukayama's Hegelian thesis was, in some ways, right. The "telos" of Western reason is - so far - liberal democracy - not an early Marxian utopia. Marx, of course, saw this coming in
Capital, where he veered towards
social democracy over the state taking over the entire means of production.
And, in his later years, he definately changed his stance on a proletarian telos, and a resulting end to all class struggle. In this sense, Marx influenced the English Fabians and European social democrats, where capitalism would be tempered, not uprooted.
However, the influence of Mao should not be underestimated, particularly in places like India and Nepal today. For Mao, the agrarian classes in pre-industrial societies are the ones who shape history, and this belief probably comes closest to having influenced freedom movements throughout Asia, particularly in the 1960s and 70s. The fundamentalist extreme of this ideology can be seen during the days of the Khmer Rouge.
Like Islamic militants today, most of these movements saw their enemy as American, or Western, imperialism. Vietnam followed the Soviet route, but cast this off as it transitioned to capitalism - the reverse of the communist take on history, where capitalism must come before socialism, which preceeds communism.
In the 1960s, the Soviet model was seen as a beacon for the developing world. The Soviets had transitioned from an agrarian, feudal economy to a powerful industrial economy in the space of 50 years.
The Soviet model became unhinged with the new communications technologies of the 1970s, and came into competition with manufactured goods from East Asia, especially Japan. In a "metaphysical" sense, a form of consumerism took hold in post-war developed societies that spread across the globe.
The Soviets could not compete. The Chinese changed tack. The GATT "quad" countries; Canada, Japan, the US and European Community, achieved economic supremacy. The Soviets dwindled and eventually collapsed. China, however, quietly developed.
Today, the bourgeoisie still run the world. And all over the post-colonial world, societies who have developed to a certain point, want a form of liberal, social, or at the very least, representative democracy.
Hegel, it seems, was right.