Vladimir Lenin — "There are no morals in politics; there is only expedience. A scoundrel may be of…"
There are no morals in politics; there is only expedience. A scoundrel may be of use to us precisely because he is a scoundrel.
There are no morals in politics; there is only expedience. A scoundrel may be of use to us precisely because he is a scoundrel.
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"To rely upon conviction, upon loyalty, upon the conscientiousness of the army – that is stupidity, that is childishness, that is naiveté, that is unworthiness."
"We shall send the priests to the guillotine. We shall put the bourgeois on the scaffold."
"The press is a weapon."
"We need to dream."
"We shall conquer the world."
Russian revolutionary who led the October 1917 Bolshevik Revolution and founded the Soviet state; What Is to Be Done? (1902) shaped 20th-century revolutionary practice. Closely associated with Leon Trotsky (his Red Army organizer and 1917 partner) and Karl Marx (the source Lenin claimed (and adapted)). For an intellectual contrast, see Karl Popper, Austrian-British philosopher — Popper's The Open Society and Its Enemies (1945) systematically attacked Marx-and-Lenin 'historical inevitability' as the philosophical structure that produces totalitarianism — Lenin's vanguard-party doctrine is Popper's primary 20th-century target.
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