Understanding 'Marxism' - a 'Jewish' Construct.   [Unfinished]

The word "Marxist" is a Jewish construct - RW
First, My Summary: Marx was and is used by Jews to deflect understanding of Jews.
Marx's work was always intended to be useless and diversionary rubbish.
He was selected, then publicised and promoted, above all other commentators,
because he suppressed all mention of Jewish activity.

Traditional Socialism
Notes:
• This is mostly written in non-'Marxist', non-'Jewish' language, aimed at people who read.
• I've included extracts from links, with intros and bold passages. See full links for detail.
• This is British-centered; but analogous material applies elsewhere.

Brief Outline of Marx's Life
Points in Marx
Points DEFINITELY NOT in Marx
Points Added to Marx
Would Anything Have Been Different if Marx Had Never Lived?
    British View: The Webbs, Co-operatives, the LSE, and the Labour Party
    British View: Jewish Publishing including the Left Book Club
    British View: Post-1945 Decline of the Labour Party | 1945 | 1960s | Blair and 'New Labour'
[ Case Against Judaism | Rae West's Home Page ]
Summary: Marx has been selected and promoted by Jews because of his selective attitude to the world
My thesis here is simply that the name of 'Marx' has been used as a sort of general-purpose dump to hide the origins of all aspects of Jewish policies as they came to the fore. 'Marxism' and 'Marxist' conceal the Jewish behind-the-scenes pushes from the 19th century. In many cases of course Jewish influence was hidden sufficiently well that such elaborate concealment was unnecessary: Jews in the French Revolution, Rothschild funding Napoleon, and the rest, were relatively unnoticed.
The word 'Marxism' coincides with increasing activity by common Jews in eastern Europe, notably parts of Russia, and also Poland, Germany and Hungary, as these areas became more defined.

Traditional Socialism
I take it that 'socialism' was a reaction to increased knowledge, inventions, control over nature, and communications. 1801-1805: Barbary War. US vs north African Muslim states over ransoms 1815: Napoleon defeated at Waterloo. Rothschild money coup impoverished many. 1818: Birth of Marx. 1834: Slavery Abolition Act removed most slavery in the British Empire 1837: Victorian period begins. Victoria's death 1901 1839-1842 First Opium War (Jewish interests) 1840s: Disraeli's greatest output of race-based novels 1843: Brunel's Great Britain screw-driven steam ship 1846-1848: Mexican-American War 1848: 'Revolutions' now known to have been Jewish-fomented 1854: Paddington Station opened in London 1855: Patent of Bessemer Process for high grade steel 1857/8: Indian 'Mutiny' was followed by the National Congress in 1884 1858: Gray's Anatomy published 1858: First (not very successful) transatlantic telegraph cable 1858: France invades Vietnam 1859: Darwin's Origin of Species published (based on Wallace) 1861-1865: US 'Civil War'. Partly based on struggle for central bank 1864: Russian Tsar refuses Jewish central bank 1867: Dynamite (from nitroglycerin) patented by Nobel 1868: Japan's start of modernisation is usually dated 1868 1871: Franco-Prussian War and Paris Commune; Germany's 2nd Reich (after many wars by Prussia, ascribed to Bismarck) 1879: Zulu War (one of many African wars) 1883: Death of Marx 1884: Spencer's The Man Versus the State 1890: Cecil Rhodes' British South Africa Company 1898-1900: China. 'Boxer Rebellion' against foreigners 1899-1902: Boer War (Jewish interests) 1904: Campaign against Leopold's Congo Free State started by E D Morel 1904-1905: Russo-Japanese War, Jewish-funded Japan won 1911: China: Manchu dynasty fell. British shipping- threat unthinkable [sailors now forgotten weishaupt in bavaria first motor vehicle first electric light nonconformists in UK from russell dupe montefiore and ritual murder case printing newpaper radio tv encyc britannica galton hereditary genius scofield bible anthropology deficiency diseases pasteur first airplane professions unions domestic servants manhood suffrage lists of names: british / continental Brief Outline of Marx's Life
Karl Marx 1818-83. Marx's antecedents were pure Jewish; 'an extremely ancient stock devoted to the accumulation of wealth' as a biographer wrote. He had a certain amount of education, which is hard to assess (one school of thought claims he did very little work, spending a good deal of his time, and his father's money, on his friends and on Jenny von Westphalen, to whom he was engaged when he was 18; another school claims he worked very hard in multifarious subjects, notably the recently-dead Hegel). Nobody ever seems to comment on the financial effect his family presumably had in permitting him to attend his various central European universities; nor on the financial effect of the death of his father when Marx was about 20.
      His subjects were jurisprudence and political economy—one presumes a Germanic version of Politics, Philosophy, and Economics, PPE, on lines which still exist in England. He edited the Rheinische Zeitung; this sounds impressive, but actual details of this publication—for example, how many copies were printed—rarely surface. European revolutions occurred in 1848, on which Marx had no influence. The Communist Manifesto (1848), jointly written with Engels, (their relative contribution being still, I think, not known), had little influence at the time). This, at least, is how that 'manifesto' is usually presented. In fact, copyright law was chaotic throughout Europe, and much of the manifesto was plagiarised, or shared, or copied, but definitely translated, from a French Fourierist, Victor-Prosper Considerant (sometimes written Considérant)'s earlier work Principe du socialisme ; Manifeste de la démocratie au XIXe siècle.
      Marx retreated to England. Kritik der politischen Ökonomie was published in 1859, but seems to be disliked even by his supporters (Eden & Cedar Paul, 1928 translators into English, say Marx used 'exchange-value' throughout it in a sense which in Das Kapital he attached to 'value'). Marx collected material from 1859 to 1865 for Das Kapital, started it in 1866, and finished it, in German, in 1867, in which year it was published. Vol II was published in 1885, and Vol III 1894, both being edited by Friedrich Engels, especially the final volume. The first English translation of vol. I was published in 1887; vols II and III followed in 1907 and 1909.
      (The title page of Kritik der politischen Oekonomie. Von Karl Marx. Hamburg Verlag von Otto Meissner. 1872. Buch 1: Der Produktionsprocess des Kapitals. Zweite verbesserte Auflage. ... which Marx sent to Darwin is on display at Darwin's house, with a note from Marx dated 16th June 1873, and a photocopy of Darwin's rather brief letter of thanks).
      Marx died in 1883, unknown except to a few colleagues, though next year the 'Communistic Working Men's Club', apparently mostly Jews from Germany arranged a visit. This at least is the 'image'; Marx as poverty-stricken turns out to be nonsense—he was from a super-rich family. When the Highgate Cemetery monument was built in 1956, 73 years after Marx's death, paid for by the British Communist Party [read: Jews], it was part of the secretive Jewish activity in Britain since Cromwell, and symbolised Jewish control extended over the entire population by the world wars after the 'Labour Party' was founded.
      (The point about Marx having no influence is found in A J P Taylor, as far as I can tell a Jew from Southport, England.)

Summary of Points in Marx review of manifesto by taylor *German language - German bourgeoisie presumably not Jews *nations consider Germany Russia Poland Hungary *Bourgeoisie *Class War *Hegelian Dialectic *Industry *capital
      Readers may like these hostile sketches by H G Wells, the first looking at Marx's character, the second at his ideas:
The Psychoanalysis of Karl Marx (1926)   |   Class War (1940) Points DEFINITELY NOT in Marx
boer war gold etc zionism protocols scientific Marxism Points Added to Marx
hobson imperialism USSR constitution / dictatorship of the proletariat lenin stalin frankfurt school Would Anything Have Been Different if Marx Had Never Lived?
    British View: The Webbs, Co-operatives, the LSE, and the Labour Party
    British View: Jewish Publishing including the Left Book Club
    British View: Post-1945 Decline of the Labour Party | 1945 | 1960s | Blair and 'New Labour'

================================================================================ Post-Revolution Marxism
Ernest Mandel Marxist Economic Theory (English Translation 1962. Probably originally published in Belgium.

Mandel: 'Under these [bureaucratic planning] conditions, coercion, both political and economic (reduction of the basic minimum wage below subsistence level), became the chief instrument used by the administration to force the working class to increase productivity.' [p 593]

This is Marx's Capital with subsequent events grafted on; much of it therefore is not 'Marxist' in any serious sense.
     


Would Anything Have Been Different if Marx Had Never Lived?
'There is no commoner error than the presupposition that scholarly disputants, in some epoch in the history of thought, utterly opposed each other. However fierce their controversies, the almost universal fact is that they held in common many unquestioned assumptions.' ================================ Labour theory: Comrades and black cocoa workers/ Critique of the Gotha Program 'shows Marx didn't believe this' acc AWL ================================ Saint-Simon/ Fourier/ Babeuf/ Robert Owen/ Wm Thompson/ Hodgskin/ Wm Morris/ Engels. Adam Smith, Ricardo Maria Edgeworth Wilhelm Liebknecht and German Social Democrats Bakunin ========= French rev pols, German philos, Eng industry === Materialistic conception of history/ Hegelian dialectic/ surplus value [- 215: [Footnote carefully explains that the 'rate of surplus value is a precise expression for the degree of exploitation of labour power, it is by no means an expression for the absolute amount of exploitation. .. if the necessary labour = 5 hours, and the surplus labour = 5 hours, the degree of exploitation is 100%. The amount of exploitation is here measured by 5 hours. If, on the other hand, the necessary labour = 6 hours..'] ========= What Was Lost by the Promotion of Marx and Why
'Socialist Workers Party' logoBlurb'Jewish Defense League' logo. Photo Michael A. Hoffman II
Relation of socialism to arts and crafts/ birth control/ rationalism ========== Hirst/ Rosenberg/ Hobsbawm ========= == Hobson Imperialism, Henry George (influenced..), Brailsford War of Steel and Gold, Norman Angell, [Hyndman? Herbert Spencer? Buckle?] US: Doane, Wheless, Draper ======= - 242: '.. terrible cotton-crisis from 1861 to 1865.' - 295 has footnote expressing similar dislike; 'nauseating quakerish letter' - 247: '.. manufacture of lucifer matches dates from 1833, when the method of tipping matches with phosphorus was discovered [sic]. Since 1845.. developed rapidly.. "phossy jaw"..'[also watchmaking, dressmaking, railway signalmen, lace making, straw plaiting, tiles & bricks] - 255: [.. Towards the close of 1865, a trade union of agricultural labourers was formed, beginning in Scotland. This is an event of historical importance. - 273: Footnote mentions the Prussian factory operative - Note: nationalism?: this is one of the very few references - almost complete absence of remark on German system, despite Engels' father having factories both in Britain and Germany [according to Russell]. - 284: 'A normal working day for modern industry dates only from the Factory Act of 1833, which embraces.. cotton, wool, linen, and silk factories. --Quesnay, McCullough, Senior etc/ 62: Bible, Revelation ======= Wells: Marx emphasis on 'system' which he regards as spurious " " on ill-defined 'classes'ditto vengefulness against those negligent of prophet armed worker Hegel and thing that is not 'proud mental aristocrat' Wrong in his prediction re highly industrialised countries ======= McFadden: Robinson: -'The orthodox economists have been much preoccupied with elegant elaborations of minor problems, which distract the attention of their pupils from the uncongenial realities of the modern world, and the development of abstract argument has run far ahead of any possibility of empirical verification. Marx' intellectual tools are much cruder, but his sense of reality is far stronger, and his argument towers above their intricate constructions in rough and gloomy grandeur.' -starts with defn -written 1941. USSR is 'socialist' ECONOMICS: BOTH SIM ATTITUDE? (Cp Whitehead) NB Marxism pre- and post-Revolution [latter illus by Mandel: Marx pretty much irrelevant] --Have to draw boundaries somewhere. If everything considered fairly, not much of a problem; simply select the most important things. In the real world though, not to simple: [1]some things secret, hidden, difficult to ferret out [2] some things hard to understand [3] vested interests prevent fearless investigation -M nothing on finance. He assumes moneybags. Capital defined as in R. Same with acad econs: in both cases (1) prefer not to look, (2) in any case rather invisible (as with 3rd world dictators and huge debts discovered to be left) -M nothing on vicious element in competition. E.g. Indian cotton. Not in blue books, public health reports & factory inspectors reports which mostly look at england in 1840s to 1860s. Academic econs same. Eg strategic dumping of cheap TVs wrecked UK TV industry. Wal-Mart etc. In particular nothing on wars, empires. Acad same. -M nothing on novelty, new products. All his theory of value is on corn. Acads similarly don't know about it. -M nothing much on raw materials (except eg land of different productivity). (Cf cargo cult idea). -M racist in anti-Slav way. Acad econs same. And regard workers as stupid; similar in acad econs- very little on education for example. -M over emphasis on economics; same in acad econs. -Omission of some aspects: inheritance, acquaintances, legal enforcement of marginal or exceptional cases.... -M Germany. Academics also like foreign stuff (but not too foreign!) IF MARX HAD NEVER LIVED: -Engels (Manchester) supplied many ideas, co-wrote, edited vols II & III of Capital. Private Property, Family etc. -Proudhon. Property is theft -Feuerbach [-Bruno Bauer atheism] -Bakunin -Hegel ======= Appeal of the scribbler: big books ======= Judaic element of prophecy, chosen people, anti-Xianity not unique ======= Not 'Marxism' - Blumenfeldism?? ======= Slav racism ======= Allied with dim revolutionaries? ====== POSSIBLE: Geopolitics Buckle-style rationalism theories of technology finance exploitation divided different ways than simple classes militarism =========== Oddity that some modern left-wingers in pocket of racist superstition by phoney members with a record of persecution, exploitation and censorship ===========