Lenin a loser? He became leader of the world’s largest nation, something none of us will ever do.
Religious types have a propensity to admire the poor; secularists, particularly Americans, to admire the rich; but neither contingent is particularly worthy of admiration.
ICXC NIKA
The above about Lenin reminds me of that line in “Man for All Seasons” in which More chided his former colleague who had been made the Chancellor of Wales…“what profit it a man if he gain the whole world but lose his soul…but for Wales?”
Possibly in gaining Russia, Lenin lost far more than he gained.
I’m reminded of two small towns of the same size near here. One is essentially run by some rather low-rent types, and has been for decades. Another is a virtual oligarchy, run by retired businessmen, decade after decade. Guess which one has good lighting, streets, an excellent police force, top flight utilities, some actual cultural events, and no real estate taxes at all?
Well, it’s the second of the two.
And guess which one has terrible streets, utilities, corrupt law enforcement, high real estate taxes, and lacks amenities? The first.
But to call the small town oligarchs “rich” would be a misstatement, at least in a way. In this part of the country even the rich are “petit bourgeois” socially, at most. So, in the “class warfare” debates, I, myself would rather be ruled by petit bourgeois than any other class if a choice must be made. Certainly, they’re capable of corruption, but at least they don’t make a spectacle of it and at least have pretensions to honesty and morality.
My suspicion is that Chesterton would share my prejudice.