They told you Marxism failed. They were wrong. The Soviet Union collapsed. The Paris Commune was massacred in a week. For decades, these failures have been used to bury the left's most powerful analytical tradition to declare the case closed and the verdict final. This book argues otherwise. Ilkka Ronkainen has spent fifty years inside the story: studying Lenin in Finnish universities, working alongside Soviet managers during perestroika, standing in Moscow in August 1991 as the old world fell, and witnessing Armenia's velvet revolution in 2018. He writes not as an outside observer but as someone who believed, was disappointed, and kept asking. His conclusion: Marxism didn't fail. Leninism did. The Paris Commune showed what genuine workers' democracy looked like decentralized, transparent, and built from the human being outward. The Soviet Union showed what happens when a revolutionary movement replaces democracy with command, the class with the party, and truth with ideology. Two experiments. Two failures. One lesson. The next attempt will have to learn from both.
Ilkka Ronkainen is a Finnish political thinker, public administration expert, and author of twenty-two books. Born in 1949, he holds a Master of Political Sciences from the University of Turku, where Marxist philosophy first shaped his worldview. Over a forty-year career, he advised more than two hundred Finnish municipalities and trained some 35,000 civil servants, helping build one of the world's most admired public sectors. In 2018, he witnessed Armenia's Velvet Revolution firsthand: a nonviolent uprising that toppled an oligarchic government without a single fatality. That experience, combined with the return of authoritarian power politics, compelled him to write Community Humanism - A World Beyond Global Feudalism and How to Bring Down an Oligarchy I - Armenian Bloodless Revolution and What It Left Unfinished.
Kirjasta ei ole ilmestynyt lehdistöarvosteluja.