Was that a conscious plan? Did the progressive intelligentsia in the United States finally decide to get serious, study Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, and follow his article that every Soviet student at a higher education institution had to read, entitled «Советы постороннего», A Stranger’s Advice (aka “Advice of an Onlooker”—hard to translate)? And what an advice that was. “Telephone, telegraph,” that is, the means of communication, information transfer, all that were available then—this is what Lenin held as a necessary condition for the revolution to succeed. That was not about just any revolution—it was the communist one, establishing a totalitarian rule.
Lenin’s article was published a little over two weeks before what later was solemnly named the Great October Socialist Revolution, Bolsheviks’ following Lenin’s “advice” and seizing power from the legitimate but helpless Provisional Government. Soon establishing a power monopoly, they extended it to full political uniformity and ideological monopoly. The printed media, in turn, was to become “organs” of the totalitarian structures—labor unions, communist organizations, soviets—and the most prominent newspaper, Pravda, the Organ of the Communist Party. To be sure, there was resistance, real and imagined by the regime, which required repression—imprisonment and murder of millions.
This country is lucky. Although the Democrat party has held its opponents as enemies to be eliminated, not to be argued with to establish a compromise, mass murder for accomplishing what Bolsheviks planned is not necessary here. The ideological monopoly has all but been established—long before the socialist revolution advanced to the power monopoly stage. The media and means of communication are carried by the information companies captured/created by communists, educated by communist teachers who had taken over the entire education system a long time ago. Who knew those companies would also be the richest corporations ever existed, monopolies in which Marx and Lenin saw the undertakers of capitalism? The communist classics thought that would be because the big corporations would produce an organized working class. They were right in one regard—not about the class (although race struggle has partially replaced class struggle demagoguery here) but, combined with the uniform ideology murdering democracy, about the ability to finish off the economic and political system they called capitalist. Ideologically monopolizing and blocking access to the means of information transfer—Twitter, Facebook, Internet in general—are critical in the totalitarian enslavement. It is not people that are canceled anymore—just freedom.
Not depriving the political opponents of life, oh no, but making life intolerable for them. What was proclaimed by Maxine Waters as needed to terrorize the Trump administration, “in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station,” will be and is already being extended to half the US population. The Reichstag fire will be many little fires, lit by little “antifa” provocateurs, progressive Blackshirts, followed by increasingly draconian censorship, elimination of freedoms, and repressions. I feel lucky that the January 6 events were not planned in the way that would leave some members of Congress or Pence dead. Considering what the Democrats have been doing since, it would be easy for them in the aftermath of that to capture Trump and any supporter of his, declare martial law, and set up the terror regime with “re-education” camps. I guess, the most rabid ones have not yet floated up to the top of the cesspool. Then again, the Biden administration is not even gathered yet.
When Lenin gave his “advice,” just a little over two weeks remained before the Bolshevik revolution, throwing the country into the darkness for almost a century—not that it had been very bright before or has been after. That likely also was a cause of Nazi ascent, as if Communism was not enough. Just a week remains for Communists’ power monopoly in the US.