Dwarkesh Podcast - Stephen Kotkin — How Stalin became the most powerful dictator in history
Episode Date: July 10, 2025The Stephen Kotkin episode. Kotkin is arguably the world’s foremost expert on Joseph Stalin and has written a massive 2-volume biography on him (with a 3rd volume in the works).No other individual h...ad more of a profound impact on the 20th century than Stalin. He held the power of life and death over every single person across 11 time zones, and he killed tens of millions of people, utterly consumed by an ideology aimed at building paradise on Earth.And, he was one half of the biggest and most consequential military confrontation in history (even if Hitler didn’t prove to be his match).Watch on YouTube; listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.Sponsors* Lighthouse is THE fastest immigration solution for the technology industry. All they need is your resume or LinkedIn profile to tell you which visas you’re most eligible for, and they’ll send you this eligibility document for free, no commitment required. Get started today at https://www.lighthousehq.com/ref/Dwarkesh.To sponsor a future episode, visit dwarkesh.com/advertise.Timestamps(00:00:00) – Was the tsarist regime the lesser of 2 evils?(00:23:45) – The peasants brought Lenin to power, then he enslaved them(00:37:38) – Why did so many go along with enforced famine and the Great Terror?(01:02:26) – Today’s leftist civil war(01:13:01) – Doesn’t CCP deserve credit for China's growth?(01:35:13) – Why didn't somebody just kill Stalin?(01:52:45) – Overcoming the pathologies of communism with tech: USSR vs China Get full access to Dwarkesh Podcast at www.dwarkesh.com/subscribe
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My guest today is Stephen Cockin, who is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and author of two-thirds of his three-volume Stalin biographies.
The first one, Stalin Paradoxes of Power, the second one, Stalin waiting for Hitler.
Thank you for coming on my podcast.
Thank you for the honor of the invitation.
Let's begin with the Saras regime.
So first question, how repressive was the Saras regime actually?
Because presumably the motivation behind the revolution is to get rid of this autocracy.
But you just have these examples of these Lenin's brother tries to kill the Tsar, and he himself is writing these long manifestos about taking down capitalism and overthrowing the government.
And him and people like Stalin are just in exile in Siberia, living off government money, robbing banks, small shenanigans.
Honestly, it sounds more forgiving than many countries today.
So how bad was it really?
So you have to put yourself back in the time period to judge the level of repression based upon what norms.
were what other regimes did rather than take the 20th century regimes as the guide and go back.
But we need to widen the aperture a little bit here.
So this is the Tsarist regime's problem.
It needs to be able to compete in the international system.
That means it needs a modern military and modern industry to underwrite that modern military.
So it needs armaments, it needs steel, it needs chemicals.
For that, you need workers.
So you want the workers only to work in the industry.
You don't want them, for example, to have a labor movement or to go on strike or to have ideas about how politics should be organized.
Similarly with the intellectual side, you need the engineers.
You need the engineers in order to design and build.
the modern attributes that you need to compete as a global power,
but you don't want those educated people to have their own ideas and values about politics,
about whether you'd want an autocratic government like the Russian regime has,
or you'd want some other type of government.
So all of these countries in the modern period have this dilemma,
importing modernization, but keeping out the political side, the value side that goes along with that.
So they need to have some way to repress and control the working class organization, movement stuff, and the university-educated intellectuals.
That's a problem we still have today.
The Iranian regime now has that problem.
The Chinese regime in Beijing has this problem.
the Soviet Union had that problem, contemporary Russia has that problem.
How do you bring in modernity, meaning you have tanks, you have airplanes, or you have
AI, but keep out, for example, separation of powers, freedom, property rights, all the things
that undermine your dictatorial rule.
So the Tsarist regime was a quintessential example of this fundamental dilemma.
So modernization is not a sociological process that kind of just happens.
It's a geopolitical process.
You modernize because you need to compete in the international system.
So if somebody has ships made out of steel, you either have ships made out of steel or they're
going to show up at your door like we did to Japan and tell you that they're in charge now.
I thought this was one of the most interesting takes in your first volume that modernization
is not this inevitable process, but is instigated by this ruthless geopolitical competition.
Do you think that that still applies in today's world?
Because, yes, there are pockets of conflict in the Middle East or in Ukraine, which would
motivate the key powers there to want to have modern militaries and modern technologies.
But through most of the world, the odds that if France falls behind technologically,
if their AI is worse, that Germany is going to take over, is just sort of unthinkable.
So this dynamic where in order to ward off colonization or other great powers, you need to stay at the cutting edge of technology and also have the up-to-date political processes.
Is that still a drive which moves countries forward?
If you have an autocratic regime, it is existential for you every day.
So you want to compete.
France can compete or fail to compete and its political system is not at risk.
No one's going to say the regime is illegitimate.
because someone else beat them in AI.
Students are going to protest in the streets.
That's not going to mean that the regime is going to fall.
There may be a change of government, but the system remains.
You have this dilemma for the authoritarians.
So you think about Peter the Great.
I need to compete against the great powers.
So I need to have a Navy.
To get a Navy, I need to have the industry that supports a Navy.
I need to have the officers.
I need to have the technical skills.
And so I need to have all of that to be able to compete.
But I have this autocratic regime.
So how do I retain the social structure, the hierarchy, the non-elected,
non-legitimate in some ways based upon modern understandings of constitutional order?
How do I retain that while I'm importing these attributes of modern power?
So that's the stuff that persists today for Iran, Russia, China, North Korea.
So they have to get very good at holding it bay those attributes of modernity that
threaten their political regime while importing as much as they can of the attributes.
But it's two sides of the same coin.
The thing that gets you the engineers also gets you the possible political ideas.
And so the Tsarist regime begins to repress the very first.
very thing it needs to compete in the international system. It represses the working class,
and it represses the engineers and the intellectuals, without which it can't be a great power,
without which it can't compete, but with which its political system is threatened. So the
amount of repression is an important question. We would call this a vegetarian regime
compared to the carnivores, like Stalin's regime or Hitler's regime in terms of the degree of repression.
But the dynamic of being compelled to exercise repression against the very people you need like oxygen,
that's the dynamic that we see in Zaris, Russia, and that we still see today in a certain form.
I was thinking is one of the key lessons from your volumes that you should be tripping over yourself in order to embrace a lesser of two evils,
and whether that applies through all the examples you give.
And this is maybe a general question about how much can you actually learn from history?
Because for every seeming lesson, there's an equal and opposite lesson that you can also learn.
So during the Tsarist regime, in retrospect, we can say that the liberals and the constitutionalists should have cooperated with Stoipin or White.
And even though it was an autocratic regime, they were actually doing these real reforms.
And there was growth.
And they should have continued that process.
Or when the government falls in February, in 1917, the provisional government faction should have, you know,
united to oppose the Bolsheviks. But then there's all these other examples. In Germany,
the conservative Weimar government is allies with Hitler in order to fend off what they think is
the greater evil, which is the communists. And given the events up to that point, it's a reasonable
concern to have, given what the Bolsheviks have done in Russia. So where should we end up on
this? Should you embrace the lesser of two evils whenever you get the chance or no? So the Tsarish regime
is undertaking this repression of people who have legitimate claims.
and that repression is quite severe by the standards of the day.
Okay, it's not going to be everybody murdered or everybody deported to the waste of Siberia,
which we're going to see in the 20th century,
when we have a different level of communications and transport, different technology,
when we have a different level of ideological commitment.
But still, it's highly repressive, it's totally unjust,
and the claims of the people protesting are legitimate.
And so Stalin goes into the underground, not because he's looking for power.
It's because he's dedicated to fighting the injustices of the Tsarist regime.
And a lot of young people like him do the same.
And so he's in the seminary.
He's highly successful, unbelievably successful.
He's great at school.
That's been true for many years now, since he was in elementary.
school. Sang in the choir, good grades, did his homework. So he's on track to be successful in
society. He gives it all up. He starts reading forbidden, otherwise censored underground
literature and books and learns about the social injustice, not just through firsthand experience,
but analytically. And he never graduates the seminary, which is the highest level of education
that was available to somebody in the caucuses
because they don't have a university
because the Tsar's regime is afraid
to allow a university.
They need the university graduates,
but again, they're afraid of the politics of it.
And universities elsewhere,
including in the capital, St. Petersburg,
are constantly being shut down
through these revolutionary episodes.
So he goes into the underground
and for 20 years of his life,
he's got no job, no profession,
no source of income.
He's in and out of prison.
in and out of Siberian exile, constantly harassed by the police.
If he escapes, they find him, they put him back.
So from the ages of about 17, 18, to the age of late 30s,
he's a penniless, jobless, revolutionary,
dedicated to fighting the genuine injustices of the Tsarist regime.
What he'll produce is a much more unjust regime
than the one he's fighting against.
So this is known as perverse and unintended consequences.
He's legitimately dedicated to revolution as he understands it in his date.
And it's fighting against legitimate injustices.
But the way he does that, the revolutionary methods that he uses, and then the regime that he ends up building, turn out to be worse than the problem that he was addressing.
This is perverse and unintended consequences.
So your question is about whether revolution is a good thing, ultimately.
even if the injustices are there
and whether there could have been some solution
that was more evolutionary
that could get you to a better place.
So the constitutionalists,
otherwise known as the cadets,
we would call them the classical liberals.
They're the private property,
constitutional order,
anti-autocracy people fighting the Tsarist regime.
They're going to be the protagonists
of the February Revolution in 1917.
and it looks like they could possibly be the solution.
Yeah.
Because they're against arbitrary, autocratic, unjust rule,
and they're in favor of constitutional order.
That's not how they behave once they're in power,
but let's leave that aside.
But here's your problem.
And this was foreseen by the Interior Minister
who puts down the 1905 rebellion revolution.
Peter Dornowo, who understands that the liberals, the constitutionalist, classical liberals, the ones who want
private property and constitutional order, probably if they had their druthers a constitutional monarchy
like you have in the UK in Britain at the time. But Dornowos says to them, you guys are fools.
Because if you take down the czar, you won't get a constitutional order. You'll get
chaos and anarchy, and you'll get a massive social revolution by the peasants predominantly,
but also by the nationalities and the workers, and you will bring on the opposite of a
constitutional order. So instead of fighting against the czar, you should throw in your lot with
the Tsar against the Stalin's and the social movement that came from the investment in modernization.
And so Dornowo has proved right.
He's proved right not just in Russia, by the way.
In many places in the world at the time, between like 1905 and 1925 or so 1926 in the case of Portugal,
you have constitutional revolutionary attempts, attempts to introduce constitutional order.
Mexico, Iran, China, Russia, Portugal.
And they all fail.
The constitutionalists take power for a brief period of time,
and then they're swept out by a more leftist, more social-oriented revolutionary process.
And so the constitutional epoch of the early 20th century turns out to be a bust.
It had to have happened beforehand.
So before the modern era, why?
because when you introduce constitutional order, like in England, in the U.S., to a certain extent in France, which has a more complicated process, you do it before you're in the mass age.
You do it before the working class and the peasantry are politically organized.
So you're able to introduce rule of law constitutionalism based on a private property model where not that many people get to.
to vote. The franchise is restricted. The vast majority of people can't vote. Only property holders can
vote, or only men can vote, not women. And so you have this restricted franchise, which is like a
breathing space for you to introduce and get used to a liberal constitutional order that you can then
democratize over time. So over time, non-property holding males get to vote. Over time, women get to vote.
time slaves become citizens. They become people and fully fled citizens and they also get to vote
and to own property legally. So you have this order that has all of these birth defects. It's very
restrictive in the franchise. Some people are slaves, not even people. And yet over time,
you can get that right because the category of citizenship and the constitutional order are
already embedded. When you have the constitutional revolution in the mass age, and when you have the
peasants and the workers and those for national self-determination, participating in the constitutional
revolution, constitutional order, rule of law isn't enough for a lot of them. It worked in Taiwan
in South Korea. There was an era of industrialization under, not a dictator, but an authoritarian
government, and then they were able to transition to a rule of law of democracy. There are these exceptions,
which have turned out to be a false normative or guiding stars for us in every case.
So it happened in West Germany and Japan under American occupation, enormously successful.
We turned Hitlerite Germany into our ally with their cooperation.
It's just astonishing.
And then Hirohito, Japan, and the emperor state.
And then Japan's two former colonies.
South Korea and Taiwan.
It worked there as well.
Hong Kong was on that trajectory until it was turned back when the lease ended to the
communist regime in Beijing.
But the number of countries that have done this is very, very few.
The opposite has happened in most other cases, where you've gotten an attempt,
but a failure to introduce enduring constitutional order in a mass society.
But there's a paradox here where if you institute this sort of revolution or changing of the guard during the mass age, then you're going to get this sort of leftist revolution, which is very antithetical to future prosperity and ruler law.
But on the other hand, if you don't have a changing of the regime, you will fail to be able to.
So it's been pointed out that Shanghai Shek, when he did have control over China, should have done some amount of land reform.
And you talk about how Stoepin, after the 1905, attempted to put in this sort of agricultural reforms, but their success was mixed because the existing aristocracy obviously didn't favor.
So there is this paradox of if you don't change the regime, the existing stakeholders will not want the kinds of reforms which should make it possible to have a lower class that's bought into the system.
How do you bring the whole society, what we would call the masses or what used to be called the masses, how do you bring all levels of society?
how do you bring all levels of society into a political system as citizens?
How do you build a polity which is inclusive of people, regardless of how much property they have?
And how do you then provide opportunity to them so that they can rise up the ladder, right?
That's the secret of success in the modern world, which a handful of countries have done
from a non-democratic starting point and which other countries have done,
from democratizing a liberal constitutional order.
So go back to the Tsarist regime.
What were the options for the Tsarist regime?
You have this very heavy absolutist regime.
Autocracy is even a more absolutist version
than we had, for example, in the French case,
when the Bourbonne dynasty could say,
the state is me or the state is I, right?
where you have this Versailles-like absolutism and aristocracy
that forms around the absolutism and is the main beneficiary,
and most everybody else is excluded from the political process,
and they are going to break through at some point.
So how are you going to manage that breakthrough?
Again, in the French case, it took more than a century to get this right,
where the monarch is killed and the monarch comes back,
and they have an emperor and they have a constitutional order and they have an elected president
who does a self-coup and one republic falls and another republic takes its place.
And eventually even the Vichy regime, a Nazi occupation regime that overthrows the republic,
right?
And so it takes de Gaulle in some ways from above to reimpose a republic, the fifth
Republic later on.
It's a very difficult process, even when it works, as the French case tells you.
So we're not saying that it's simple and easy and that Tsarist Russia could have gone
down this path.
A lot of people say, well, if it hadn't been for the war, Tsarist Russia was on an evolutionary
path.
It was modernizing economically.
So it might have been a kind of Taiwan story over time where the dictatorial regime
gave way under economic success and political pressure to a more benign regime, and they
institutionalized a rule of law, private property, civil liberties, inclusive polity for everybody.
And the problem with that is that the autocracy refused to do that. The autocracy wanted no part
of any evolutionary process. So in 1905, when the Tsar, the Tsar's regime is competing,
under pressure of tremendous peasant revolt and worker strikes and a defeat in the war against Japan,
when they're compelled to introduce some version of constitutional order, a kind of quasi-parliament, quasi-constitution,
the Tsar regrets doing this almost immediately and is trying to push back against his concessions
once the lid was put back on because of repression, once Dornavaux repressed.
successfully the political movement, the czar wants to undo those concessions and go back to being
an autocrat. An autocrat after crotor means a self-power, a power unto itself. And so this is your
challenge. How do you undo the autocracy and get to an evolutionary mode when the autocracy
itself is committed to not allowing any political participation whatsoever.
And so you have the leftist version of overthrow, where you end up with a radicalization
in the leftist direction, and you have a rightist version of overthrow where you end up
in a kind of, oh, we're not going to have Leninism here.
Let's prevent Leninism.
Let's go with the radical rights, so the traditional right,
invites, as happened in the German case, and earlier in the Italian case, invites the radical
right to power, thinking they can control the radical right, the fascism, the Nazism.
The traditional right is wrong. The radical right, once it's invited to power, institutionalizes
itself. So you get a leftist version of this and a rightist version of this, and then they're
kind of codependent, where each uses the threat of the other to further consolidate.
their dictatorship. So this is the 20th century version. The irony here is that you got the radical
right, the fascist solution in the German case, and you got the radical left, the socialist solution
in the Tsarist case. The Tsarist regime had a massive radical right. They had the protocols of
the elders of Zionism, that infamous tract, anti-Semitic tract, which then makes its way to Germany
but originates in the Tsarist empire. So the anti-Semitic empire, so the anti-Semitism.
Semitism is there. The right-wing movement is there implanted in villages, the union of the
Russian people. Russia has the fascism before Germany. Germany has the largest socialist party
in its parliament in the sense that it's not a majority, but it's a plurality. The social
Democrats in Germany are enormously successful at the ballot box, and the right-wing movement with
the anti-Semitism is enormously successful in the streets in Tsarist Russia.
So if you were alive before 1917, 1933, you would predict that the socialism would be victorious with triumph in Germany and the fascism would triumph in the Russian Empire.
But it's the opposite.
And so that's just a fascinating, amazing paradox that I tried to deal with in the first volumes.
You say that in 1917, a leftist revolution of some kind was inevitable, but that it didn't have to be the October Bolshevik revolution.
So why was leftism inevitable in Russia at the point?
You put your finger on a big part of it when you talked about Chiang Kai Shack and land reform.
You have this peasant land hunger.
And so the peasants are often without their own holdings.
They work on someone else's property or their holdings are so small that if there's a little bit of bad weather, let alone a massive drought, they're on the verge of starvation.
So subsistence level agriculture is not politically stable.
So you want a class of people, kind of yeoman capitalist,
property owners who can expand their farms and can succeed and hire labor.
And some of those hired hands can then get their own land and become a version of these yeoman farmers,
sort of Thomas Jefferson style.
Or Stalepin, the great attempted reform of Stalepin after the night.
1905 revolution, which ends in his assassination.
So you need to deal with the peasant land hunger so that it becomes a stabilizing political
force because the peasants get the land and then they have a piece of the status quo and they
want to retain the system versus the peasants don't have the land and they want to overthrow
the system to get the land. So in the Russian case, there is the end of serfdom in the 1860s,
again, as a result of the defeat in the Crimean War,
where there is a reform, they free the serfs, emancipation of the serfs.
But the serfs don't get the land to the degree that could have happened
because the landowners are the political support of the Tsarist autocracy.
So to take the land away from the land magnates and give it to the peasants
is to go through this risky path where you're losing,
one political support, the landowners, before you've fully gotten the new political support.
So you're going to go through this valley of hell potentially where all bets are off and you're
not sure if it's going to work. So the peasants don't really get the land as they could have in the
1860s and it becomes a problem that's not resolved right through 1917, 18. So the peasants have
their own revolution in 1917, 18, which is not about the socialists.
parties. It's not about the Bolsheviks. It's not about Lenin. It's about the peasants
seizing the land. But that creates an intense radicalism that becomes the platform for the
socialists in the cities to gain and hold power in the system. So you don't have that in the
German case. In the German case, you have strikes and seizures of power in a few places,
like Bavaria, for example. You have a Bavarian-Soviet socialist.
republics, but they're easily put down by the forces of order or the army. And guess who's in the
army? The peasants. So you don't have a peasant army ready to put down the revolt in the Russian
case because the peasant army is the one seizing the land. It's the one doing the radical
revolution. So you lack the forces of order to destroy the leftist movement in the Russian case
because it is the leftist movement in the Russian case,
which should be the forces of order.
And in the German case, and to a certain extent,
the Italian case, which happened simultaneously,
and there's also a Hungarian case here,
where you have leftist revolts in the cities,
seizures of power, like the Paris Commune of 187071,
which happens in Paris, not in the rest of France,
and you need a peasant army
that has a stake in the existing order
to undo the city,
leftist revolution. And so you have this in the other European cases. In one case, you don't have this
in the Russian case. Then you're going to get to the Chinese case later, which is going to be a
variant of what happened in the Russian case, where you have a gigantic land-hungry peasantry
that's going to become radical for a time. Again, they're going to be perverse and unintended
consequences. The peasants are ready to destroy the existing order, not to bring
communists to power, but to seize the land themselves. So in the 1920s, the peasants are de facto,
not de jure landowners. They don't own the property in law. They own it in fact. But then Stalin's
going to reverse the peasant revolution violently and re-inserve or enslave the peasants across all the 11
time zones, this gigantic Eurasia. And the peasant revolution is going to be annihilated in blood.
And so the peasants have, through their radicalism of seizing the land, have helped bring Lenin and his Bolsheviks to power in the cities, which is going to be the death of the peasants' owning of the land and instead the reinsurfment of the peasants.
And something similar is going to happen in the Chinese case.
So again, there's this irony of history, perverse and unintended consequences.
Stalin is fighting against czarist injustice, only to impose worse injustice.
and worse bloodshed and worse repression. And the peasants are fighting on behalf of obtaining
the land only to then be expropriated and forced into these collectives and losing the very
land, the land that they took and the seizures that brought these leftists to power in the case.
So in central Europe, the southern German case, the northern Italian case, the Hungarian case,
you don't have the endurance of the leftists in power. They're all.
thrown out. They're thrown out by the forces of order. They're thrown out by the right. And so the
traditionalism of the peasants, where they believe in God, they believe in law and order,
is overriding because they already have a lot of the land in comparison to their Russian or
Chinese counterparts. And so they can be part of the forces of order. And so you can get fascism
in Central Europe. You can get the right-wing dictatorships in Central Europe, the forces of order,
destroying the left, whereas you get the leftist dictatorships in the giant peasant societies
where you don't quite have the distribution of land. Now, the peasants are complaining about
land distribution in Italy and Germany, don't get me wrong, but relative to Russia and China,
they're doing well. So then you think about the Mexican case, the Iranian case, the Portuguese
case, all of which are peasant societies as well. So there's how you integrate farmers
The whole world order rests on the back of farmers.
How much farmers till means how rich or poor your country is.
Whether you have a surplus, as we call it, that the farmers can sell on the market after they consume what they need for their family's purposes or not,
tells you how much wealth you have to then build an army, build modern industry, etc.
So the world order rests on these hardworking, predominant in the population peasantries.
And in some ways, the political system doesn't derive in deterministic fashion from them.
Politics still matters and politics is never reducible to social relations.
But failure to master or mastery of the social relations of the peasant land question is fundamental in some of the political outcomes.
So the politicians have to be good at managing the peasantry's integration into that society where you're trying to get an order in the mass age.
You're beyond where just the court society at Versailles, the Tsarist court in St. Petersburg, right, or the men at the constitutional convention in the U.S.
Or the people who are the, you're beyond that in the mass age.
to be able to incorporate the masses somehow in a polity. And it's really hard to do. And so this
dynamic of failure to master or mastery over it, it tells you a lot about the direction you're going to
go. This answer is one of the other questions I had for you, which is why did we see these
communist revolutions in peasant countries, which is the opposite of Marxist prediction that
you would first need capitalism and industrialization before you would see the turn towards socialism.
And I guess the answer is that the private property, which is engendered by capitalism and
industrialization, actually helps the peasants more or helps them somewhat and buys them into the
system.
But this raises another question, which is, if it's the case that all of this unrest is caused
by the mistreatment of peasants in China, in Russia, you have the mistreatment of them
to an extent unimaginable after the collectivization in 1928, where they're literally
100 million peasants are enslaved.
And of course, there's some lack of cooperation with the regime that kill half the livestock and so forth.
But it doesn't break the regime, even though it's way more repressive and destructive than anything the Tsar did.
So if the peasants are the backbone of the regime stability, why doesn't collectivization in China and Russia break the regime?
Yeah.
Terrific questions again.
So you have a multi-prog dancer.
Let's do it this way.
On the one hand, you have a much bigger repressive apparatus,
much, much bigger repressive apparatus.
So the Tsarist regime has a very small secret police, really small.
The secret police for the Tsarist regime is mostly following the handful of intellectuals.
You have a few thousand university students in Tsarist Russia.
in the mid-19th century, when 5,000 or so,
when this term intelligentsia gets invented,
and you're going to have a few thousand more over time,
but you're in the thousands, not the millions of it.
Even there, though, like Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin,
they're sent into exile,
but they're not only living off government money,
but while in exile, they're writing for Pravda,
they're writing, you know, here's my manifesto on the fall of capitalism.
So even the intellectuals are not really depressed.
The sense of repression is more about following what they're,
do rather than arresting them on a pretext and putting a bullet in the back of their neck.
So you have this Tsarra secret police, the Ahranca. That's the pejorative nickname for them, the
achranca. They're tasked with following these revolutionaries and infiltrating their groups
and maybe sabotaging them from within. Something similar happens in the labor movement
where you have this Zubat of Shina, is the Russian term,
where you plant the leader of the workers' movement
in order to make sure that it's controlled by the secret police
rather than has a spontaneous or autonomous version
that could get out of hand.
So you have a small police that's dedicated to surveillance and infiltration.
You're reading their mail,
which, by the way, is something that's invented.
in France. The black cabinets are a French invention that the Tsarer's secret police borrow.
And so you're following them, and a lot of them get deported to Siberian exile, like happened
to Stalin. Some get forced into European exile, like happened to Lenin. Lenin for 15 of the 17
years between 1900 and 1917 is in European exile. He's not even in Russia. And in fact, the Paris
branch of the Tsarist secret police, the Ahranca, the Paris branch, which conducted the surveillance
and infiltration in Europe, we have that entire archive right here at the Hoover Institution.
It was supposed to be destroyed.
The order went to destroy it in Paris after the revolution, and instead the guy put it
on a boat and secretly had it shipped it here to the United States.
And so now we have the Tsarist Russian archive secret police for the foreign revolution
the revolutionaries in foreign exile.
So you have surveillance and infiltration on a lower level.
The main force of repression in Tsarist Russia is the army, not the secret police.
You don't have a gigantic armed secret police.
The secret police are kind of intellectuals.
They're reading Lenin's tracks and they're writing summaries like AI would do now
about what they contain and how to combat it and why the idea is wrong.
They're sort of like pseudo-intellectual.
intellectuals or in some cases intellectuals with degrees, they're not the thugs, the torturers
and the thugs that we would associate with secret police.
That's built under Stalin in order to enact the reinsurfment, the enslavement of the
100 million peasants.
It's that act, it's a kind of chicken and egg thing where how do you enslave the peasants
without the gigantic secret police, but then when you enslave the peasants, the result
is you have this gigantic secret police now
that can do everything and anything.
So it's a process where the chicken and egg
are happening simultaneously,
and they're building the secret police capacity
while enslaving the peasants that they didn't have before.
Can I ask about that?
How do we explain this surplus of sadism
during this period in Russia
where the 25,000ers who Stalin recruits
to go out to the countryside
and steal from basically starving people
and they can visibly see, I'm sure, that they're stealing from a family that's going to starve without this grain.
You have tens of thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands of interrogators and torturers in this Gulloch system.
They must know it's a cynical thing where they're making them confess to a thing that they haven't done and they're employing torture to do it.
It wasn't just Stalin doing all these famous things.
There were hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of people, if you include informants, probably millions of people who are implicated in this whole ghoulish regime.
So is this just a latent thing that is.
true in any society and Stalin was able to exploit it or with some circumstance created this
level of...
Yeah.
Again, it's a fantastic question.
So we get this from Lev Koppelav, education of a true believer.
He was one of these people.
He later then becomes a dissident.
He gets forced into exile in Germany.
He's a Germanist by profession.
And he writes this fantastic memoir, a couple of memoirs, but one of them is called Education
or True Believer.
which covers how he was the one who did this, including in his native village.
So here's your answer.
On the one hand, there's ideology and the importance of ideology.
We may think that no one really believes the ideology,
that the ideology is too ridiculous.
It's too disproven by facts in life.
We're too smart, and they couldn't have been as stupid.
They had to be smart like us and not believe these crazy things.
fairy tales about it. In fact, it's wrong. They do believe the ideology. And they're young.
They're young people. And so a story of the evil of capitalism, you have World War I. Millions
of people die. Like, for what? Why are those millions of people being killed? The flower of European
youth and then many colonial armies get drawn in because of European imperialism. Young people,
The future of those countries go to their senseless deaths.
What's that about?
It's about imperialism.
It's about capitalism.
And so that's evil, and we must overcome that.
And so there's a way in which life experience, as well as the fervor of youth, let's build a new world today rather than wait for tomorrow.
Let's be impatient.
Let's eradicate capitalism.
Let's bring about socialism.
Let's bring about socialism meaning end war and imperialism.
Achieve abundance for everybody so that it's not just the haves and the have-nots,
but everybody's got something.
And in the process, let's make my little life world historical.
So here I am just a little activist with a red star on my cap.
And my life means nothing, except if I'm a participant in building a new world.
In a world's historical process, that's going to end exploitation.
That's going to end haves and have not.
Do you think that those genuinely, I get if you're a middle bureaucrat in the Communist Party, sure.
Do you think that explains the motivation of an interrogator and a gulag?
They're like, oh, this is part of the end goal of communism.
There's a big story here, which is about how we're building a new world, and there are people against that because they're the bourgeois.
or they're the fools who are doing the bourgeoisie's business on behalf of the bourgeoisie, right?
They're duped into false consciousness.
But in many of these cases, they know that it's, they're the ones orchestrating the sort of show trial,
the cynical game, or they know that they just picked up a random person in the dead of a night.
They know that there are enemies out there.
They know that this process has people who are against it.
That's a given.
Who are the people who are against it?
You see, they're masking their true feelings.
They're hiding behind professions of loyalty.
When in fact, when the hour of crisis comes and there's a war, they will be the saboteurs behind the lines.
The fifth column.
And so it might be that some of them are innocent that you're arresting, but some of them are clearly going to be guilty as well.
And so to get the guilty, you have to somehow manage to deal with your victimizing people.
who are likely innocent, and you may know are innocent,
but you also know to your bone marrow
that some people out there are enemies.
It's hard to identify and find them,
so you're overcompensating a little bit
to make sure that you get every last enemy.
Again, it's a crazy idea to us.
It makes no sense to us,
but a lot of things make no sense that people believe in.
So there's this young kid
who's really adept at social media,
media, who just looks like he won the primary for a Democratic candidate for mayor in New York
City.
And one of the things he wants to do is freeze rents, rent control.
Because he wants more affordable housing.
So he's a complete idiot in terms of facts.
Because the way to get more lower rent affordable housing is to build more housing.
If supply massively increases and it's...
exceeds demand, the price has to go down.
It's proven again and again and again.
And what rent control does, or freezing of rent, it inhibits the building of new housing.
Because who's going to build new housing when you can't make money off of it?
So rent control is what produces the lack of affordable housing in the first place.
So he sees what's the problem as the solution now.
Now, is he a fool?
No, he's a really bright guy. He's very well educated. He's read everything and anything. He's been to university. He's talked to a lot of really smart people. And you'd say, how could he be so foolish to believe an idea that's obviously falsified by empirical reality? But again, it's an ideological belief. He wants to allow people who can't afford Manhattan to live there.
And that's a good idea. Life should be more affordable. There should be more places like Queens
where you can come in as immigrants or you can come in as lower class, front end of the social ladder,
like my family did, for example. My father worked in a factory. And you should be able to get
some housing for your family, work hard, and rise up. I agree with that 100%. But he's got an ideological
approach to how to achieve that, which to me is completely foolish. And if I were as smart as him,
how could he possibly hold that idea in his head? But so ideology is pervasive. It's pervasive flying in the
face of empirical reality. We could give many examples. I'm not picking on this guy in New York.
It's just a recent example. I don't know him. I've never met him. Whatever. Maybe there's a more
complicated story there. I'm just saying that we have to take ideology seriously because it's deep
and it can be enduring even in the face of empirical reality. There's ideology, but there's a very
specific thing to these Marxist regimes where they might believe in class conflict and you need
this revolution and so forth. But there's also this sense of you cannot contradict the party.
You cannot contradict the vanguard.
So even in 1924, when Trotsky is getting condemned by the party or whatever that was,
and he gets up to give a speech to the party plenum, right?
And he says, look, for all of my thoughts, let it be no mistake that the party is always right
and party discipline is always important.
So there's not only the sense where I think Mamdani would say, oh, I want these specific
policies implemented, but the sense that also loyalty to the party and eventually to stop,
even when it seems to contradict my understanding of socialism is absolutely paramount.
And one way to explain that is that they were just genuinely afraid of Stalin and they thought
this was antithetical to their understanding in communism.
Or another is that part of the ideology is this theocratic understanding of the party is always right,
even if it seems like a single individual is manipulating it to their ends.
Why is Marxism, Marxism, Leninism, especially, so attractive to young people?
into intellectuals. Why? We have this history, which is a bloody mess. Millions of people die,
and they die because of the enactment of this ideology. How could people continue to adhere to an
ideology like that during the murderous time period and even more after the murderous time period
when we can look at it dispassionately? Here's part of the answer. Again, young people are attracted
to impatient, quick, total transformation of the world,
eradication of war, eradication of social injustice.
And there's a simplicity to the ideal.
It's kind of a total package.
It gets rid of everything bad just if you do,
if you follow the precepts.
And so, sure, things happen that shouldn't have happened.
There are some surprises.
There are some downsides.
But are you pro-capitalism? Are you pro-imperialist war? Are you pro-landowners having all the land and the have-nots having nothing? So there's this constant threat where if you contravene the ideology, you're in bed with the very evils that the ideology is trying to overcome. So you become an accomplice in the persistence of the things that you're dedicated to overthrowing.
it's not just that you're loyal to the party. You're loyal to the outcome that the party is
dedicated to achieving. And you know that there are going to be mistakes and costs and bad
things happen along the way. But hey, is imperialist war better than that? No. The answer is
imperialist war has got to be worse. But the other reason, which is even deeper than that,
is because Marxism, Leninism, empowers the intellectual class and the lumpen intellectual class.
You see, in a market system, you get to do what you want.
You want to open up a family business.
You want to take a loan and give it a try.
You can do that.
Nobody can stop you.
Now, it might be that it's hard to get the loan in some neighborhoods.
It might be that the loan interest rate is.
You've got to work much harder than you thought, et cetera.
But you get to make the decisions.
You get to decide what to do, when to do.
You can work for somebody else.
You can put out your own shingle.
In these kind of systems, it's the intellectuals and the lumpen intellectuals who make those decisions.
They use the state as an instrument to overcome the injustices of the existing society.
Again, the injustices are real.
But that empowers them to be in charge.
So the beauty of Marxism-Leninism and why what we used to call the third world loves this
is because they get to be in power.
It empowers them across the board.
They get to make the decisions on the economy.
And they don't have to submit to elections.
They don't have to have a mandate.
They don't have to legitimate their rule beyond the ideological building of a new world,
of overcoming injustice.
what we see again and again is young people being impatient for evil to end, but also empowering
themselves to be in charge. They love the state. They love the state as an instrument for social
justice, social engineering. They love to empower themselves as the decision makers, because
after all, they're the intellectuals. They've studied the theory. They know better than
others. Workers and peasants and the downtrod and the lower classes, they sometimes have
false consciousness. They don't understand why, for example, we have imperialist war. They get sucked
in. Bread and circuses fools them. They have this false consciousness, but I know better,
and I can be in charge, and I can get us to a better place. Even along the way, bad things
are going to happen. Some people who are innocent are going to die, or,
be arrested, but this is the march of history. This march of history is to peace and justice. And who is
going to stand in the way of that, especially when it empowers you personally so that you could never do
this in the private sector. Nobody could afford you this kind of power in the private sector
and in a decentralized political system, in a federalized political system, where nobody
accumulates that much power. Social engineering is
always coercive, always coercive. The issue is how much of the coercion is necessary
that we accept in the trade-off to write some of the things that are obviously wrong.
All the anti-Marxism I totally agree with, but I still think from a purely just like
analyzing the system, there's many ideologies. And you know, you have this line that you often
have that, look, you can't explain Stalin by saying that he was beaten by as a kid or he's a
Georgian or whatever because many other people are Georgians or beaten as a kid and they turn
out not this way. There's many different kinds of ideologies. For sure. And very few of them
end up as amenable to dictatorship as Marxism. And you also, another thing that's really confusing
here is that all of these old Bolsheviks who abet the system and who eventually Stalin purges,
whatever you might say about them, they're not weak men, right? They were willing to face down
the czar. They were able to organize the revolution.
against the Tsar, and they're willing to live in exile to potentially get shot by the
Orang, I guess not shot by the Oronka, but you know, whatever.
They're willing to go through hardships for their beliefs.
So you might think, well, okay, they might just go along with Stalin's doing because this
serves what they think is the end goal of communism.
But we know that after Stalin died, Khrushchev, who was one of the key people in the regime,
gives a secret speech, where he says that no, Stalin was going again.
He was destroying the building of socialism and the building of Marxism,
Leninism. So people did believe that Stalin is actually going against this end goal that they have.
At least Khrushchev believed that. And there's also that in many cases they themselves are being
implicated and they know they're innocent. And in many of these cases, there's this period in between
when they're a dead man walking because Stalin has started putting, you know, the Met feelers out,
that this person is a Trotskyite or something. But they're still in their positions of power.
they're still the editor of Pravda or in charge of the military or something.
And it's mysterious why these people who, they're not cowards, they're able to organize
a revolution against the Tsar, are not using this period of, you know, a chicken with its head
cut off in order to organize some sort of defense of themselves.
Maybe the next time they're the party plenum, instead of just saying confessing or giving
the obligatory speech where you're cast to get yourself, you just say, no, I think Stalin's
leading the revolution wrong.
I'm going to die either way, but I might as well say this.
The same thing happens in China, at least I quote, when he's a dead man walking, the premier, under Mao during the Cultural Revolution.
He doesn't use that opportunity to go up to the problem.
There are very few, but there are some people like that.
And they're arrested and executed, all of them.
Very few of those kind of people are going to survive.
The ones who publicly decry the failures of the system and its perverse and unintended consequences,
the ones who decry the dictatorship as opposed to the freedom that Marx predicted would happen.
There are some people like that.
They're extremely courageous.
They're known to us.
I'm not the only one, but I feature some of them in my book.
But again, you're creating a new world.
And it's going to be messy because it's about class struggle.
And class struggle means there are going to be winners and losers.
And the bourgeoisie have to go.
they're inherently evil.
They're an evil class.
They have to not just be retired to a farm somewhere.
They have to be eradicated, liquidated as a class.
And so they're going to resist.
And therefore, they're going to be enemies everywhere.
And again, you're not going to know who they are.
So are you on the side of the enemies?
But what about the cases where they're implicating themselves?
They know they're not an enemy, right?
But again, the party is larger cause than they are.
You're building a new world.
Your life can contribute to that or not.
And it's insignificant, ultimately.
What fraction of confessions by high-level party members?
Do you think we're not coarse out of a sense of fear of their own lives or their family's lives?
Well, I guess they knew they were going to execute it.
So it would have to be for their family's life or to avoid torture versus in order.
It was a very sort of Ozzymandian, like, I will, I will sacrifice.
sacrifice mental self for the...
We're in the level of psychology here, D.K.
Yeah.
And it's human psychology is a complex subject.
Figuring out human psychology is a big challenge,
even with everything we know now, let alone what we knew that.
So it's simultaneously everything and anything.
We have to get rid of the binaries where, you know,
they didn't believe they were cynical,
and they sacrificed themselves because they were cowards
or because they knew that they were forced to make that sacrifice
to preserve some of their family members or whatever.
There are elements of belief
and elements of, let's say, suspension of disbelief
and elements of cynicism and knowledge and understanding
simultaneously in almost everybody.
They coexist.
We think of them as contradictory,
but humans can hold contradictory.
Dictory thoughts simultaneously without too much trouble.
We could give many examples.
You've had people like that on your show, for example, right?
So the psychology is not as surprising in some ways.
What's surprising is that this whole thing succeeds.
It doesn't collapse of its own internal contradictions.
It doesn't undermine itself.
If you're murdering a high percentage,
of your upper officer corps, if you're murdering your intellectuals, your scientists, your
cultural figures, if you're murdering your loyal party elites, centrally and in the provinces,
and if you're murdering the police who are carrying out all of these murders.
The thing about Stalin's terror is the police are also murdered during the terror while they
are doing the murdering. You're doing all of that, and the whole thing doesn't collapse.
To me, that's more interesting in some ways than the complexity of human psychology that holds these contradictory thoughts and fails to go for self-preservation in some cases, or fails to say, I'm going to die anyway, I might as well go down fighting or whatever the metaphor might be.
And so the fact that the system is able to undergo this level of self-disruption and come out the other side, that's pretty astonishing.
So Hitler does not murder his upper officer corps.
He doesn't like them.
He retires them and they get a pension.
He doesn't murder the gal lighters or the Nazi party officials.
He doesn't murder the intellectuals.
Some go to prison.
Some go into exile if they're lucky.
And some definitely are executed, often for acts that they've committed, sometimes just because they had an enemy in the system who wanted to enact revenge against them.
But for the most part, Hitler is attacking what we would call his real enemies.
That is to say, people who are opposed to his regime, either in thought or in action or both.
Stalin is attacking those people, but he's also attacking loyalists.
he's taking down in really big numbers, system loyalists, people who would walk through fire for him.
And one of the things they do is to walk through the fire of their self-immolation on behalf of the cause.
And this belief in the new world, in the better world, in transcending capitalism, in getting peace as well as abundance on the planet,
in building paradise on earth
needs to be understood
as absolutely fundamental
to everything that we're talking about.
We often talk about Nazi racial ideology.
How could they believe that stuff?
That stuff is obviously ridiculous, you say, right?
Gerbils, who helped enact
the regime's ideology about a master race
had several deformities,
right, club foot, walked in a brace,
and yet he's helping preside over the murder of people
because they are disabled.
They're singled out solely for their disabilities
to be sent to the gas chambers
or to be sent to imprisonment.
And he's one of them.
And so we say, you know, could he really have believed this?
I mean, wasn't he a cynic enacting this?
Because how could he not understand?
that these are real people because he's one of them.
Right.
And the answer is, well, yes, he was a Nazi.
These people were communists, and he was a Nazi, and there were a lot of them.
And they had doubts.
They suffered bouts of doubt.
A lot of events contradicted the official ideology.
Innocent people, innocent family members, themselves innocent, went to the gallows, got the bullet in the back of the neck.
And so you say, God, this, the belief, they couldn't have believed this stuff.
And yet they did.
The main thing that we know from the archives that were formally secret that we get into when they're declassified is that the Nazis were Nazis.
And the communists were communists.
So here we have this problem with socialism.
Socialism means many different things, right?
A communist party is building socialism.
Why?
because their view of the world is feudalism, capitalism, socialism, communism.
So first they have to destroy capitalism to get to socialism,
and then socialism can eventually get you to communism.
So the Communist Party must first build socialism.
How do you build socialism?
It doesn't exist.
So how do we know what it looks like?
How do you get there?
They don't know.
The only thing they know is it's not capitalism.
So let's destroy capitalism.
That will be the step to get us to socialism.
So capitalism has markets.
We'll have planning.
Capitalism has private property.
We'll have state property or collective property.
Capitalism has bourgeois parliaments where they vote and they claim it's democracy,
but it's only for the property holding bourgeoisie.
So we will have a dictatorship of the proletariat.
Everything, capitalism has wage, slavery, right?
that is to say real slavery.
Exactly.
But everything is eradicate capitalism to get you to socialism.
It turns out that that doesn't deliver freedom.
It doesn't deliver prosperity and it doesn't deliver peace.
It delivers massive stateization because once you eliminate private property and individual
choice, the state is now responsible for everything.
And it delivers ration tickets and the gulag.
So you get a bunch of socialists that break.
from this. They say, you know what? Lenin is wrong. Eradicating private property, markets,
civil liberties and parliament is a mistake. We have to accept private property, markets,
capitalism, and parliaments because that's the only way to get to freedom. Otherwise,
you get to the Leninist dictatorship, total statization, gulag, and ration tickets.
These people are denounced as revisionists, like Edward Bernstein and Germany, for example,
the Swedish social Democrats.
They say we accept capitalism, markets and private property.
We want to redistribute the income because it's tough for some people to make their way in the system.
The system produces inequality and let's make it more equal with social engineering, redistribution.
but we keep capitalism, we keep markets in private property, and we keep democracy, voting,
rule of law, et cetera, and will evolve towards full socialism and eventually communism,
but we will not do it the Leninist way.
And so there's this huge break in the socialist movement between those who are real revolutionaries
and want to overthrow, eradicate capitalism to get to the just and prosperous and peaceful future.
and those who want to use the existing system and evolve, embrace and accept it.
So the left has a civil war, a civil war on the left, which is still going on,
between those who say capitalism is evil and must go versus capitalism has a lot of problems,
but we need it in order to have peace and prosperity, in order to have freedom,
and we just need to manage it better.
redistribute.
And so this civil war on the left, which arises in real time, the critics of Lenin's
revolution, the German Social Democratic Party, people like Bernstein and the rest of them,
they are critics in real time of this.
And yet, some of the critics who are what we would call the Social Democrats of Europe,
Lenin was also a member of the Social Democratic Party of Russia, but
The communist thing makes this divide between those who are serious about destruction of capitalism
and those who are, quote, revisionist, this denunciate her term.
What happens is some of the people who are in the revisionist camp begin to flirt with
the capitalism as evil analysis.
And so they begin to truck with the communists that they've broken from and are in civil war with.
So you get left-wing social Democrats who are closer to Lenin than they are to right-wing social
Democrats like Bernstein and the rest, who are pro-capitalism but pro- redistribution.
And so this is confusing to people because not everybody is a communist.
Some people like in Sweden accept private property and markets.
But some of the people in Sweden seem to go back on that promise of accepting it
and arguing that if we don't get rid of capitalism,
we're still going to end up with an evil system.
And so this civil war on the left never gets resolved.
It's ongoing.
And the right uses this confusion to paint everybody as anti-capitalism.
And the left gives them ammunition
by talking about the evils of capitalism,
even when they've come along to accept private property and markets.
And so you have this really deep and fundamental problem for the left, the tragedy of the left, that it's never able to overcome, even to this day, where it comes out and says, no more anti-capitalism ever.
That is over.
That leads to death, bloodshed, gulag, ration tickets, war.
That actually is worse than the solution, than the original problem it diagnosed.
Think about Marx.
Marx says you get rid of private property, markets, capitalism,
you're going to get freedom, you're going to get abundance.
You don't get that.
And then people say, oh, you know, but Marx wanted freedom.
He didn't want Stalin's dictatorship.
So it's not Marx who's the problem.
It's Stalin who deformed Marx.
We see this argument all the time.
Stalin is a deformity, whereas Marx was about freedom.
So think about a nuclear bomb.
You're going to do a nuclear bomb.
You're going to nuke a population.
But you don't want to kill any people.
Your goal is to nuke them, but nobody dies.
That's what you say.
You're going to get rid of capitalism.
You're going to nuke them, but instead everybody's going to live.
And you give that order to your generals.
You say, nuke them, but everybody lives.
Nobody dies.
So they nuke them and everybody dies instead of everybody living.
And you say, you know, I never said to kill the people.
I said that they should live.
But once you nuke capitalism, you're going to lose freedom.
You're going to lose the ability to have politics.
You're going to end up with some version of a Leninist system.
And the ideology is going to drive that to the doubters.
And then you're going to get a second wind where you get Khrushchev, like you said.
He comes into power.
He denounces Stalin's crimes.
He doesn't praise capitalism, private property, and markets.
He doesn't undo collective farms.
He doesn't undo state ownership of property.
He doesn't undo the planning system.
He just undoes Stalin's personality.
He's trying to subtract.
The de-Stalinization is take away Stalin.
It's not take away any of the other attributes of the system.
And so it's a second wind that it was Stalin who was the problem,
not the system that was the problem.
So here we have the experience of going through the horrors,
then having those horrors publicly denounced within the party.
The secret speech is not published in Soviet newspapers,
but it's discussed at party meetings in all locales.
So within the party, there's a public dimension to this.
All party members become familiar with Khrushchev's denunciation of Stalin.
So they experienced the horrors in many cases firsthand.
They enacted the horrors in many cases themselves.
They then see this denounced as horror, and they get facts that they didn't know.
They get a big picture view back onto this.
And instead of saying, oh my God, this system is evil, we made a big mistake.
We have to undo state ownership of property.
We have to undo collective farms.
We have to undo the dictatorship.
Instead of saying that, they say, oh, we get a chance to do it right this time without the evil Stalin who messed it all up.
And so the Khrushchev thing, the revelation of the horrors, the denunciation of the horrors, ironically, gives you the second wind belief in the system that's going to last right through Gorbachev, who's a Khrushchev-era baby.
We have this with Xi Jinping.
if you know the story of his father and of his own upbringing,
they suffer massively through Mao's regime and the cultural revolution.
They're purged, they're humiliated.
And yet, instead of saying, this system is horrible,
if I ever get power, I'm going to undo this system,
which was so unjust to me and my family.
Instead of that, they say, let's make this better.
let's not have the bad things that happened under Mao,
but let's keep all the good things, supposedly good things that happened,
including the Communist Party monopoly,
because that to us looks like the problem,
and it wreaked havoc in their lives, in their family's life,
but to them that's the solution.
And so this is a paradoxical element of communism
where its failures don't become discrediting for so many of the people.
They instead become a kind of second wind once you acknowledge and denounce them.
So it's never the system at fault.
It's Stalin at fault.
It's never the system at fault.
It's Mao's mistakes or excesses, as they're called, that are at fault.
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In China's case, they actually did reform the system and didn't just, they didn't just discredited the cultural revolution.
They said, no, much of the planning and state-owned enterprises was a mistaken idea.
But I do have a different question.
That's not exactly the way you described.
You have a point.
You're onto something, D.K., but it needs to be qualified.
So what happens in Deng Xiaoping's case is the communists have accidentally, that is unwittingly,
not accidentally, unwittingly, destroyed the planning system.
They have sent down to the village people who do economic planning.
They've sent them to manual labor.
They have smashed them in the face because they wear glasses in many cases,
and therefore they're putatively intellectuals.
And so they've undermined their ability to continue the economic system as they had it.
But if that's the reason why they weren't able to do planning,
shouldn't Stalin's purges and then World War II have also had the same effect on the Soviet Union?
Not the political system.
Dong Xiaoping never takes down the political system or the ideology.
And so you still have today the communist monopoly.
Communism can fail at everything.
It can starve the people.
It can kill the people.
It only has to do one thing to survive.
suppress political alternatives.
So during that resistance, peasant resistance to Stalin and the collectivization episode that you
referenced earlier, there's no political alternative.
There's no other place for them to go and say, we don't like the injustices of the Tsarist regime
and we don't like what communism is doing.
Therefore, there's something else that we can go to that's an alternative.
Communism has suppressed all the alternatives.
So it's either return to czarism or keep communism.
And so in the Chinese case, you have something quite similar.
They allow economic liberalization, in part because they have no choice.
But they don't allow political liberalization.
And so they're able to, quote, reform by enabling the people to generate wealth, jobs, prosperity through market behavior.
And it's mostly the peasant class in China, which then lead to.
to family-owned businesses, which then leads to larger businesses. And so society, not the party,
creates the miracle in China. And the party tightens its grip because the ideology of the party is
when the socioeconomic base has a lot of market in it, it's a threat to the party's rule. So the
party has to be even more vigilant against the capitalists in the society. And it turns out that
you get to Zhang Zemin, who is Deng Xiaoping's handpicked successor,
and Zhang Zemin sees that the private sector is becoming dominant in the country
and that the party's monopoly on power is under threat.
And Zhang Zemin decides he's going to do something called the Three Represents.
He's going to bring the millionaire capitalists into the party.
He's going to make them party members.
So instead of the party being against,
capitalists, the capitalists are going to join the party, and this is going to somehow
increase the party's leverage and control and transform the psychology and behavior
of the capital.
Of course, it fails.
Instead, the party members are in cahoots with the millionaires, and they begin to form
their own businesses by expropriating other people's property, and the party begins
to go dissolute in an anti-Marxist fashion in terms of private property, wealth, accumulers,
So Xi Jinping comes along, predictably. He looks at Zhang Zemin's solution, co-opt the millionaires into the party, sees that it failed. Not only did it fail to transform the behavior of the private sector people, it infected the behavior of the party people. So he's going to, instead of bringing the capitalists into the party, he's going to force the party back into the capitalism. So he's going to push the party into the capitalism. So he's going to push the party into the party.
the private sector more strongly than it was before. Board directors, party officials.
CEO, party official. Private sector people who don't cooperate, destroy them, make examples of them,
including in the tech sector, so that people get the message that the party is the boss here.
So you have a kind of natural progression where you open up the system economically in order to drive jobs,
prosperity wealth because you've destroyed.
People say the Communist Party brought 700, 800 million people out of poverty.
No.
The Communist Party put those people into poverty.
Why are a billion plus people in poverty?
Because of the party's rule.
It's the people themselves, they lift themselves out of poverty.
And so the communists have to reassert their control, their Leninist monopoly on power,
because the very thing that has rescued them, the diligence, entrepreneurialism, ingenuity of the amazing Chinese people and of that society is now a threat to communist rule.
I mean, I agree with the mechanism by which the growth happened.
But I don't think it's the case that it was their inability to have true Marxist communism, which,
which led to liberalization.
I mean, if you look at the
the creation of the
special economic zones,
the imperative at a national level
that you must have growth.
And then
Deng's southern Turen, so Zhang Jamin,
he tries after the Tiananmen to
clamp down on these protests,
clamp down in opening up.
And Deng says, no, we must open up.
If you don't, you'll remove you.
All of that is a sort of positive,
maybe positive is a wrong word,
but, um,
Policy-driven.
Yeah, it's a special effort you have to make towards economic liberalization.
It didn't just happen by default.
People really had to push for it because the alternative story, which seems you're saying,
is no, it was just that they physically could not enforce communism anymore.
That's how it started, D.K.
So let's go look at the facts.
Why do you have a special economic zone?
Why can't every zone have market relations?
The creation of that zone had to be a proactive action.
grudgingly. This is a grudging allowance of certain behavior. So you look at the decrees.
You can trade onions, but you can't trade potatoes. Okay, you can trade potatoes, but you can trade only
on Tuesdays and Thursdays, not Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. You can only have three employees
at the rise of the corporation. Right. So the decrees are all grudging, with very few exceptions,
and the society is forcing more and more concessions onto the ideologues.
in the Marxist-Leninist system.
Right.
So at the beginning, it's launched
by the party's grudging acceptance
that the society is going to rebuild
and not starve through its own hard work.
So they've been through a couple of famines here.
I mean, really big famines.
They don't have the state capacity
to reimpose the system immediately
in the economic sphere.
So they grudgingly make concessions
very few but some in the market sphere.
Gradually, that expands over time
as more and more people push
against the system's restrictions.
And so it's a policy-driven story in part,
but not as the lead.
It's a policy-driven story
as the following of the entrepreneurialism
and the hard work of the system.
But that pushback must come from,
is coming from within this.
This is your thesis in uncivil society, right?
that it is coming from within the system.
Because they could have, I mean, in 1976, they're like North Korea, literally.
And North Korea still exist, right?
There's no reason.
North Korea doesn't have the cultural revolution where it annihilates its state capacity in a Maoist frenzy
in order for Mao to, in his mind, undo his rivals, unbalanced and destabilize them.
Yes, they do.
But they still have the men.
mechanisms of economic control, and they have a massive black market. You got to remember that
the communism doesn't have legal markets, for the most part. It has restricted legal markets,
again, grudgingly, household plots. But for the most part, it has a lot of illegal market activity,
including in the state sector. So the state sector gets in order to produce certain numbers of
large quantitative output for the military industrial sector,
but it only gets allocated 25% of its ball barracks.
So it has to assign its supply department on the black market
to go out and find the other ball bearings that it's not assigned from central planning.
So you get a massive black market in the system,
not just at the level of little people in the village,
but at the top level of the military industrial complex to make the system work.
So when market behavior is grudgingly accepted, what that does is it brings market behavior
out of the shadows into a legal or quasi-legal realm.
So you're not inventing market behavior from scratch.
You're surfacing it in some ways.
And so party officials and industrial officials, they have market behavior in their firms
to grease the system and to meet their output quo.
I mean, I agree their general point.
that how any nation gets wealthy is not by the government, but because of the thrift and
entrepreneurialism and hard work of individuals. But that's also true in Western capitalist countries.
In those countries, we also have a lot of stupid policies.
As we sit here and speak.
What we say America is a capitalist country, what we say is like the government or all the
bureaucrats, they'll try to put in all these regulations. And it's only grudgingly that they
will accede to, you know, we could point to a bunch of stupid policies in America where
like they try to outlaw the potatoes and the onions,
but they could only outlaw the potatoes equivalence things.
So any capitalist society, quote, unquote,
is just a case where the government had to accede some amount of control.
And we give credit to capitalist countries in the West
were saying, like, at least the government wasn't maximally stupid.
Fair point.
D.K., fair point.
We often exaggerate the role of policy in all realms.
because we do policy ourselves or we talk to policymakers,
we have a bias towards the causality of policy.
So America is 25% of the global economy since 1880.
We've had no income tax.
We've had income tax.
We've had high income tax.
We've had low income tax.
We've had tariffs.
We've had fewer tariffs.
We've had all sorts of regulations.
We've had deregulation.
For 150 years, more or less,
We've been around 25% of global GDP, which is 5% of the population.
Through every imaginable variety of policy regime, that doesn't mean that policy is
inconsequential.
It matters for a lot of players in the system.
It matters for those who get the policy turned in their direction, the subsidies or
the tax breaks or the taxes on their competitors or whatever it might be.
a lot of gaming of the system, and it does matter.
But in the larger picture of things,
you can't create the wealth of the United States
over those 150 years, that global economic dominance,
and you can't strangle it in the policy realm.
You can affect it, but you can't either create or strangle it.
And so we have to understand in the communist sense
that incentives matter.
We know that.
And so when you create incentives for officials,
to increase GDP and to increase job creation,
and that's how they get rewarded,
you're going to get a lot of that behavior,
and the party will do that not immediately.
Remember, immediately they're kind of flat on their back,
and they've had this gang of four,
and Deng Xiaoping has come back from having been purged,
and they're on the verge of another potential famine,
and per capita GDP under Mao is $200 during the cultural level.
Revolution. $200 is the annual per capita GDP of a billion people. And or slightly under, and you think
that's insane. That's where all the people are in poverty when I was saying the regime put them in
poverty. And so they're a little bit flat on their back, which creates an opening and it creates
this grudging dynamic of we're going to hold power and we're going to allow the economic
entrepreneurialism to take place, but we're going to control it.
We're going to control it with special economic zones.
In any country in the world today where there's a lot of poverty, the reason the poverty
exists is also because of policy.
And the extent the poverty has been removed, it is because some combination of human
capital and policy got less stupid.
So if we're going to complain about a country like, there's many poor countries in the world,
like Bangladesh being poor, the country which just does it less,
maybe we're going in circles here.
A different question I want to ask is.
No, you have a point.
We're not disagreeing.
I'm just trying to say that we give too much credit to the Communist Party
for what's happened in China and not enough blame for what's happened in China.
And this is part of the dynamic of us seeing communism as potentially successful.
So we criticized these fools who thought that the Stalin regime was not going to kill them, was not going to produce famine.
And yet we have this narrative that the Communist Party produced an economic miracle in China, which I'm sorry, the Communist Party took advantage of the economic miracle in China, played a part in the expropriated the hard work of many people, stole the businesses.
A lot of those local officials just stole the land and stole the businesses from people who created.
created a success. This is the thing that the party did that's really important.
Deng Xiaoping first went to Japan in early 79.
Before he came to the U.S. and met Carter, put on the cowboy hat, that gigantic 10-gallon hat
that was bigger than he was. He was like five gallons. The hat was like 10 gallons.
He goes to Japan. And you're looking at Japan, D.K., and it lost the war. It was
actually literally incinerated in the American use of atomic weapons. It was destroyed. It lost the
war. And it's rising to be the second largest economy in the world. Like, what happened? How was
that possible? How could Japan rise from the ashes, literally, when China won the war. It was on the
winning side. And it's $200 per capita GDP. And Deng Xiaoping looks this over and he says, you know what
the answer is, Japan is partners with America, not with the Soviet Union. And so Deng Xiaoping is going to
divorce the Soviet Union economically, and he's going to marry the U.S. And so Dung gets most
favored nation status in 1980, thanks to Jimmy Carter. Communist regime in Beijing gets most
favored nation status, which has to be renewed every year.
and is renewed every single year until 2000, 2001,
when they're admitted to the WTO.
Now, that's a Clinton initiative
that happens right when Bush is going to come to office.
And so the secret sauce is
you have to manufacture and export
to the American domestic market
because the American middle class is insatiable.
They will buy anything
as long as the quality is high,
and the price is low. Japan did this. Japan's two former colonies, Taiwan and South Korea,
followed in Japan's footsteps. China's going to do this too. We're going to use this Japanese model
and the American middle class and their insatiable overconsumption is going to create the Chinese
middle class. So this is what the party does. This geopolitical reorientation from a Soviet economic model
to a Japan-style export-led partnership with the U.S. domestic market and middle class.
They have a couple of tricks that are really important.
They have Hong Kong.
Hong Kong is a British-controlled rule of law, international financial order
that allocates capital based upon risk and return, not Communist Party dictates.
Gorbachev, Soviet Union, they have nothing like Hong Kong.
The only reason China has Hong Kong is because after World War II, when Truman announced that
Chiang Kai Shack and the nationalists were going to accept the Japanese surrender in Hong Kong,
the British sent their boats in and took Hong Kong back themselves so that when Mao
defeated Chiang Kai Shik, he didn't have Hong Kong.
The British had Hong Kong, and they created this international financial system that Mao's successors would be able to use.
Had the British not done this, there would be no Hong Kong and there would be no Chinese miracle in the Deng Xiaoping and after period.
The other thing they have is they have overseas Chinese who know the culture, speak the language, and are going to do the FDI.
Again, routed through Hong Kong, so you have Taiwan.
So ironically, the failure to win the civil war 100%.
We think of the Korean Peninsula as divided.
We think of there's partition of the Korean Peninsula.
But China is also partitioned.
There's also Taiwan still partitioned to this day.
And Taiwan is the FDI that's going to come in through Hong Kong,
routed through into the special economic zones on a risk-reward capitalist market basis.
not a communist basis.
And furthermore, they have the Japanese war guilt
because the Japanese committed those atrocities in China.
So the Japanese are going to make up for what they did
by helping rebuild China.
Again, the FDI and the tech transfer,
like is coming from Taiwan.
So Taiwan and Japan, this partitioned China
and this guilty, you know, the war guilt,
through the British Hong Kong
is going to go into the special.
economic zones, manufacture things like the Japanese, and then export them to the American
domestic consumers. And it's going to be T-shirts at the beginning. And then they're going to
like the Japanese, and then they're going to climb the value chain until it's the highest value-added
products. And then supply chains are going to change as a result and nothing is made in one place
anymore. And the world gets very complicated. But the point being is that Deng Xiaoping did that. That was
intentional. That's the credit that the party deserves and the party never gets because it's a story
not of the party's rule alone, but of British Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, United States, domestic market.
And so how do you get rich in the modern world? You sell to America. Those countries that are
partners with America and that are able to compete, the Chinese deserve credit, they can
manufacture higher quality, lower cost products that American consumers will buy.
American consumers are not forced to buy Chinese products. They're just better and they're
cheaper. And so they buy them because it's a market and there's competition. So some countries
in Bangladesh can do this in textiles. You reference Bangladesh, which is how I got launched on
this reverie that I hope is now ending. My point being is that,
the East Asian miracle, which is Japan, selling to the American domestic market, followed by
South Korea and Taiwan, doing the same trick, and then followed by Deng Xiaoping's Communist China,
the same exact trick, filtered through British Hong Kong. The problem with the Chinese one
is that they're not allies, former enemies who are allies like Japan. They are former allies
sworn out enemies who have done this magic sauce. And now we're in the pickle that we're in as a
result of this. But the formula is this is where the communists deserve the credit that they never
get, whereas they get credit for things that they didn't do. Yeah. Suppose Stalin had lost
succession battle in 1924 and somebody else is in power, but he's still on the Central Committee
or the Politburo. And it's 1930. And suppose the other person is also,
in this way ruthless and is one by one getting rid of every single person in the inner circle,
what would a Stalin-type figure have done if he found himself on the periphery of somebody else's regime?
So counterfactuals are really critical for historical thought.
A lot of historians are pedantic about this, and they say we're against counterfactual.
It's just speculation.
But every single one of them is a practitioner.
Why?
If you say that Stalin caused collectivization, that means without Stalin, there's no collectivization.
If you say Hitler caused World War II, you're doing the counterfactual.
You're saying no Hitler, no World War II.
And just to put a final point of my question, I mean, not just in the sense of whether
collectivization would have happened, but more in the sense of how would he personally have avoided
the fate of Bukharan and Khamenev?
Genoviev, in terms of he, potentially, I'm going to get pert someday.
I don't want to be the toady to somebody else.
How would he personally have navigated the sort of power struggle at being what
Genoviav was to Stalin or Bukharma Stalin?
This is a question about how do you become Stalin?
Could there have been another Stalin besides Stalin?
Yeah.
A lot of people will argue that you have this formative period when you're growing up,
your parents, your schooling, the influential.
of your peers, and you become a certain personality.
Part of it is genetic, and then a lot of it is the environment,
and you have this then personality,
and so you have to understand how the person formed,
whether it's Picasso as a painter or Stalin as a dictator.
And then if you understand their personality,
you'll understand what they do in power.
The problem with that analysis is Stalin is not Stalin
when he first gets into power.
It's the experience of being in power that makes Stalin Stalin.
It's the building the dictatorship within the dictatorship,
and it's the enacting that kind of power that makes Stalin who he is.
It's sitting in that chair.
It's being in the Kremlin running a Leninist regime
and being responsible for Russian power in the world
against Nazi Germany, the UK, the U.S.,
So people say about Xi Jinping now,
you know,
Xi Jinping has made a lot of mistakes.
If he had just kept to Deng Xiaoping's policies,
China would be much better off.
We'd be still in a kind of detent
or partnership with China
and instead we're at loggerheads
and there's potential war.
And the problem with that analysis is
what would Xi Jinping have done
if he were the number one guy
under Deng Xiaoping?
instead of Deng.
Maybe he would have done
Deng's policies,
just like Deng did.
More importantly,
what would Deng do
if you were alive today
instead of Xi Jinping?
Would he do what Deng did
in the 80s and 90s?
Or would he do
what Xi Jinping is doing today?
In other words,
how much is the personality
and how much is the system?
How much is formation
before you get into the position of power
and how much is the circumstances
and responding to those circumstances and the exigencies of the moment and the way the system
operates and the place the system is and what the larger context in the world looks like.
So here you have a communist party seizes power.
And as I said, unlike the case of Bavaria, southern Germany, northern Italy, Hungary, it holds power.
It doesn't just seize power.
The Paris commune in 1870, 71, they ceased power in Paris, and then they were destroyed, put up against the wall and shot.
So they seize and they hold power.
But they're in this peasant country, and the peasant has the land de facto.
And they're Marxists.
So they believe that the base, the socioeconomic base, the class relations, determine the superstructure or the politics, right?
Marxism, the base, the socioeconomic base, gives you the superstructure.
depends on it's an outcome of what the base is.
So you have a de facto capitalist base.
Yeah, I don't mean like whether they would have done collectivization.
I mean like how would he personally, because he wants to be power.
I get that.
So he makes this decision.
All of them want to get rid of capital's relations in the countryside.
Every single one of them want to do that.
They're all communists.
They're all Marxist-Leninists.
But they don't think it can be done.
They think if you try it, you'll fail.
So he goes and tries it.
He creates even more destabilization than they had predicted,
but he just powers through and gets there to the end and succeeds.
And most of them are grateful that he's pulled this off
because they thought it couldn't be done.
So your question is,
who else could have become Stalin in that position?
Who else among the Marxist-Leninists could have been the guy,
who says whether we can do this or not,
we have to do this
because we can't have a socioeconomic base
that's capitalist and the communist regime will survive.
They were all ready to say that,
but they weren't all ready to do that.
Moreover, after he does it,
they had criticized him during the process
while he was doing it.
He was the only one in his mind
who was Marxist-Leninist enough to get it done
and they were all carping at him.
So this is where you begin to see the paranoia's suspicion being magnified,
where he then in a few years after collectivization is more or less finished,
he's going to go after them.
So you needed a person who could have felt in their head
that this was not only necessary but doable,
undertake those risks,
power through no matter how much famine and resistance and appeasement,
upheaval and criticism there was.
And then come out the other side of that
as the victor with this gigantic secret police
that was really small but got really big
in the process of doing the very thing
that people said you couldn't do.
And then having all of that
and not destroying any rivals
and going from dictatorship to despotism.
So you would need a person
who was capable of being Stalin in that group,
not from outside that group, but inside that group,
and then would either not use that power
to destroy everybody else,
not yearn for despotism,
but be satisfied with dictatorship,
where others exercised power and their domains,
and yet still able to hold on to the system.
So was there such a person in the circle
and could
if the answer is no
could that person
have emerged
in the process of doing it?
I guess my question
is slightly different
which is that
even if such a person
did not exist
and suppose
like Stalin already exists
he did all the stuff
and it's 1934
and you know
it seems like Stalin's
starting to go a little
great terror
soon
and another copy of Stalin
is in the Pollard Bureau
and just out of a sense
of self-preservation
they're like
in a couple of years, I don't want to be writing my own confession and ending up in the gulag.
Is Stalin being the sort of power player that he was and knowing how to align factions against
each other to his own advantage in the very end?
If somebody like him was in the Polybier, what would they have done?
Or were they already there and there was nothing they could do by this point?
This is a question for every single dictatorship.
Why didn't somebody just kill Stalin?
Yeah.
He was going to kill them, kill them all.
Why didn't they just kill them and save themselves?
So during the 20s, Stalin resigns six times, three times in writing and three times orally, between 23 and 28.
And every time those guys around him beg him to stay.
So not only do they fail to try to push him out, but when he himself volunteers to go out, they beg him to stay.
And then he kills all of them.
Within 10 years, every one of them, with a few exceptions, is dead.
And so, geez, what were those guys thinking?
It's clear that Stalin was not Stalin yet.
If they knew in the 20s that in the 30s he was going to murder them all,
maybe they would have acted the way you said.
So he becomes Stalin in this process.
He's not Stalin yet.
That's a really important argument that I make in the book.
But today you look at Putin.
Putin is ruining Russia.
Why doesn't somebody just assassinate him?
Xi Jinping, he's hurting China.
He's making China enemies everywhere around the world when China was until recently popular.
China was 75% favorable globally.
Now it's 25% more or less favorable globally.
That's Xi Jinping's doing.
How can the elites around him let him do that?
Around Putin, the people are falling out of windows.
Instead of falling out of windows themselves, why don't they push him out the window?
Khomeini in Iran.
Right.
He's brought ruin on the country.
Why don't they take him out and try to save themselves and save the country, not just themselves?
In other words, be patriotic as well as self-survival.
And the answer is it rarely happens.
One, you have a collective action problem.
But sorry, why doesn't this prevent the Tsar is like, people are trying to kill the Tsar constantly?
They're killing Russian ministers in the Tsar's regime.
And I think you in the car...
Hitler, there are more assassination attempts on Hitler,
some of which come very close than by far on Stalin.
But never against Stalin.
Why is that?
Stalin is the guy who is building and personifying the system.
The people around Stalin can see that he is unusually good at dictatorship.
He is just carrying this entire system on his back
through thick and thin, killing enemies, liquidating the coolocks,
collectivizing agriculture, building a military industrial complex,
defeating Hitler in war.
I mean, how much better from the system's logic, not from humanity's logic,
not from the point of view of the kind of values that you and I share,
how much better are you going to do than Stalin?
And so there is a way in which they're pygmies and he's Stalin.
So of course they know that they can't do what he does.
And if they try to unseat him, they might save their lives, but they might lose the system.
And the radiant future, the overthrow of capitalism, the abundance, peace, paradise on earth.
That's a big move to lose if you believe in that, if your life is about that and you're dedicated to that.
But in addition, you have a collective action problem that's really important.
So let's suppose that I'm in a Stalin regime with you.
You're a functionary and I'm a functionary.
And Stalin's collectivizing agriculture, which means he's destroying the productivity.
And we're going to be poor all the way through the Brezhnev period.
We're going to be importing wheat, even though we have this gigantic agricultural belt, wheat belt.
Some people knew in real time that this was self-harm.
And I come to you and I say, this Stalin guy, he's wrecking everything.
We got to take him down.
You agree with me.
But you know what?
You don't know.
Maybe I've been sent by Stalin to test your loyalty.
Maybe I'm provoking you to reveal your disloyalty.
maybe I'm not being sincere.
So instead, you agree with me, but instead of saying, yes, let's do it,
immediately you run to Stalin and you say that this Kotkin guy is talking behind your back
about how we need to take you down.
Because you're going to preserve your self-preservation.
You're going to preserve yourself because you don't trust.
There's a lack of trust inside these dictatorships.
if you knew that Stalin hadn't sent me, for sure 100%,
you would say, you know, you're right.
You got a point there.
What can we do about this?
But you know that Stalin is constantly doing these provocations,
or you suspect he is.
And you know that he's got people,
provocateur who are around the system doing things like this.
And the secret police are listening in on your phone conversations.
And the driver of your car works for Stalin doesn't work for you.
and is reporting any overheard conversations in the car.
And the maid in your apartment is also working for the secret police
and reporting up the chain of command.
So the system that you're in and meshes you in this distrust,
in this surveillance and distrust.
So what looks like, geez, let's just take them down and save our own life,
let alone save the country, looks like, yes, it's logical,
but that's not the kind of lives that they led.
we would think that based upon the kind of lives in the system that we live in.
But there's a bunch of revolutionaries who try to kill the Tsar and sometimes succeed.
Yes.
And they're just like random people.
They're not like people in the regime.
They're just random people.
Yes.
Why doesn't the Kuulah, one of the 100 million enslaved people?
The Tsar has less security than Stalin does.
But didn't you say in the kind of that in 1920s, he had like one bodyguard when he would go to his dacha?
The bodyguard stuff increases over time.
Right.
The regime is walled off from the people.
Stalin doesn't go out in public.
He's not one of these populist types in public who's bathing in the adulation of the crowd.
He's in the office.
He's at the Dacha.
He's at the party meeting.
He's at the party Congress.
And so he's not putting himself at risk.
Right.
But even so, it is paradoxical because when Hitler goes to make a speech,
Every year, Hitler makes a speech in Munich.
And it's known when he's going to make the speech.
It's announced in the paper.
And there are a couple of assassination attempts on Hitler,
one of which takes place in the hall where he's going to do,
where someone plants a bomb.
It's a working class guy, plants a bomb there.
And the bomb goes off, it blows up.
But Hitler left the hall more quickly than anticipated,
based on the schedule that people thought he would be there longer.
it was quicker he was out, and so the bomb exploded and he survived.
There are military officials who try to kill Hitler famously in 1944.
They plant a bomb under the table, which also goes off and almost gets him but doesn't get him during a military briefing.
And so there are attempts on Hitler's life, both from the society and from inside the regime.
And Stalin doesn't have this.
In fact, the people inside the regime are killing themselves when they see.
see that Stalin is leading them down a blind alley of murder and ration tickets in Gulag,
they kill themselves rather than kill Stalin.
So again, there's something special about the mentality of these communists,
and there's also something about Stalin's success as well as the threat that he represents
to these individuals.
Still, it is mysterious because there were opportunities, and people didn't take up the opportunities.
The very few, I mean, there's no serious assassination attempt on Stalin.
The very few times when they accused somebody of doing an assassination, for example, there were shots fired at a boat when Stalin was on holiday in the south.
It was not because Stalin was in the boat.
It was because the boat was not in the system as marked as allowed to use that waterway.
And so they were just performing their duties as border guards.
That's funny.
Shooting at the boat in it.
It got dressed up as an assassination attempt,
and people were arrested and executed.
And it was publicized as such,
but they didn't know that Stalin was in the boat.
Yeah.
So you have, you've written other books about the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Yeah.
And there's this last ditch effort in the Eastern Block
where there's falling productivity to borrow more money,
invest more into finding this last-ditch technological miracle that can cure all their problems.
How similar is that, in your opinion, to what's happening in China?
Because the dissimilarity is that while Eastern Europe was struggling to export and they had a trade deficit,
China, many people argue, are exporting too much.
Do you see any similarity between where Eastern Europe was in 1989 versus where China is today,
or is it you're not as concerned about China right now?
It's a very difficult question to answer very briefly, but it's a really important question.
There are tremendous differences, of course, civilizational differences, let alone system differences.
And we wouldn't want to ally those differences.
What's similar is the Marxist-Leninist monopoly on power.
People ask me, is China a Marxist-Leninist regime?
And I usually say it's a Leninist regime because that's undisputed.
Right. Do they believe in the Marxism or not? People disagree on this. How many true believers are there? Is Xi Jinping a true believer?
That's a difficult argument to win because the evidence is contradictory and because we don't know the inside of the system well. It's still in power. It hasn't fallen.
But it's clearly a Leninist system. And a Leninist system can't be half pregnant. You can't be half communist. You either have a communist monopoly or you don't.
So what happens in communist political reform, not economic reform, where they allow some market
behavior, but where you liberalize the system and you open it up politically.
So you say, D.K., okay, let's have debate inside the party.
Let's allow pluralism inside the party's rule, meaning we're going to keep the party,
but we're going to allow different tendencies in the party.
The problem with that is some Weizaker raises their hand and says, I don't want
the Communist Party. I want a Social Democratic Party or I want a right-wing party or I want a
centrist party. And you say, no, no, no, that's not the rules here. The rule is only debate
within the party's monopoly, not that you can have another party. So what happens is there's no
way for them to open debate and then to put a lid on the debate. It becomes a Pandora's box.
You can't be half communist, half monopoly. You either have the monopoly or you don't. You either have the monopoly
or you don't. So every time they liberalize politically, the system liquidates itself.
Hungary and 56, Czechoslovakian, 68, and Gorbachev. Had Gorbachev not happened, China might have done its own Gorbachev.
Had they not seen Gorbachev accidentally liquidate the party, they might have done political reform,
opened up the party, and watched the thing unravel. Or they would have had to crack down
and put the lid back on, much bigger than the Chanan Men episode in June 1989.
So they're not going to do political reform because they know from studying the Gorbachev case,
which everybody studies in party school, which is where all the cadre have to go to be trained.
They're not going to open up the system politically because that's suicide.
And they're not going to commit suicide like what happened with Gorbachev.
So this means their policy options, their menu of policy options is limited.
They can open up the economy, but if it gets too open and too liberalized, too many people
with independent sources of power and wealth, too many Jack Maas, they lose control potentially.
So they can open up the system economically, but then they've got to somehow reimpose controls.
But if they reimpose too much controls, the GDP goes down and they don't have the job creation,
so you have this constant back and forth of how much economic liberalization
you can have before it becomes a threat
or how little economic liberalization
you can have before it becomes a threat
to your ability to create jobs and wealth.
So that's the dilemma they're in.
The Soviets in the 70s and 80s
were looking at the system
and they didn't want to change the system, Gorbachev style.
They didn't want to liberalize it politically.
They were willing to introduce some market
economic liberalization, some market incentives.
They tried that in 65. It actually didn't work.
And anyway, then the Prague Spring happened in 68 and scared the bejesus out of them.
Reform looked like the end of the system.
So they tried a little bit of economic liberalization.
It didn't work.
They didn't want to open up the system politically.
So what's left?
Technological fantasies.
Yes.
Maybe technology can professes.
planning so all the pathologies of the planned economy, all the inefficiencies of the planned economy
can be overcome with computers. Maybe if we invest heavily in tech, we don't have to do the hard
choices of deep and fundamental structural change, which would end our party's monopoly.
We can keep the party, we can keep the party's monopoly. We can even keep the state-owned
economy, but we can just tweak it with the tech and supercharge it or even turbocharge it
and make it work that way.
So computers, tech will save us from the hard choices of deep structural reform, which will
threaten our power.
We know how that worked.
It didn't work.
Now you're looking at China today.
You have a Communist Party monopoly, and you can't be half pregnant.
So you can't open up politically.
So how are you going to reintroduce the dynamism?
How are you going to get the GDP growth?
How are you going to get the job creation?
How are you going to get the societal buy-in?
Because if you go too far in that direction, that could threaten the regime.
And if you don't go far, so tech, we got tech.
The tech can make our dictatorship function better, not just our economy.
our productivity, our job creation, managing through the demographic crisis, not just the economic
and social benefits from tech that tech could deliver, but tech could maybe even make
our communist dictatorship immune from challenges because of the surveillance is all encompassing,
because of our ability to spot things before they happen. And so you can see where they would be
so seduced, so tempted that tech is the solution. Here's the problem with that argument. First,
it didn't work the last time. That doesn't mean it won't work this time, but the track record,
even though it's a small number of cases, is not good. But the other problem is political legitimacy.
You can't get political legitimacy. You might have thought that, you know, oh, geez, if the GDP grows,
that'll give us the legitimacy.
Then the GDP stops growing
and you no longer have the economic benefits
to claim that that's why you're in power.
But do you need it?
Like, Stalin didn't have strong growth
in the 20s and 30s.
And it seems like you just double down
and repress.
Like, if you double down on the NKBD,
like the Tsar actually, you know,
2% growth up until 1917, huh?
They're dead.
They're in the cemetery.
That's the point, right?
The growth is dead and the system is gone.
So it's fundamentally a deficit
of political agenda.
legitimacy. So when we talk about, you know, Iran today and how Russia and China didn't even
help them with any military support or economic support while they're under tremendous strain
from Israel rolling back Iranian power. And so they kind of got betrayed by their strategic
partners. The strategic partnership among the authoritarian regimes is a fake. That's true. It is a
fake. They're out for themselves. They're opportunistic, and they will help the others to the extent
that they feel it's helping for themselves, and the day that they feel it's not helping themselves,
forget it, right? But there's a deeper problem there. What Iranian regime needs is political legitimacy.
That's what it doesn't have. It's not just a failure economically. It's not just a failure in security
in its foreign policy terms. It's hated by its own people. It's got maybe 20 percent support.
court in the population.
And a lot of people are indifferent, but a majority of the people despise this regime
want to see it go.
They're patriots for Iran, but they detest the Mueller's clerical regime.
Neither Russia nor China can give political legitimacy to Iran.
They can give dual-use technology.
They can give them missiles.
They can give them anti-missile defense.
They can never give them political legitimacy.
And that's the vulnerability, which is why Iran is on the precipice now, because the regime is illegitimate.
And the regime knows that it's illegitimate in the eyes of the people.
I guess we'd like to think that that's the main thing that matters.
But historically, it just seems like when authoritarian crackdown really hard, it kind of just works.
That's why they have gigantic repressive apparatuses.
Because people talk about a bargain.
The Chinese made a bargain.
where the Russians made a bargain.
The people gave up their freedom
and the regime provides a higher standard of living.
So there's this bargain.
There is no bargain.
Because if the regime fails to raise the standard of living,
the people can't sue them in court.
They can't say, oh, you know, you didn't live up to your end of the bargain.
We gave away our freedom,
but you didn't deliver on your part of the bargain
so the deal's over, you're out of power now
because you didn't live up to your bargain.
Instead, they repress.
They bring out the betrower.
tons, they bring out the water cannon, they bring out the disappearances where people are arrested
and they're not even arrested in cause. They're not even indicted. They just disappear them.
And so you have this huge repressive apparatus and it seems to work, especially when you have this
moment where you fail to live up to some of the promises that you made. The challenge for them
there is somebody has to do the repression. The repressive apparatus is not a machine.
It's not AI.
It's not something which is mechanical.
It's people.
It's people who grew up in neighborhoods, come from villages, went to the schools with other people.
This brings us back to the Tsarist regime where we started.
The Tsar's secret police wasn't big enough to keep the lid on.
So they had to use the military.
The military was a peasant army.
They were peasants in uniform.
and the working class, including women, were striking for bread in the capital
and marching in the capital for bread in 1917.
And the military was told to shoot them.
And these are elite military units.
Shoot these workers and they're peasants.
And you think, okay, peasants, they'll shoot workers, right, and all of laws.
The workers were peasants yesterday.
And some of them were still peasants who went back to the villages where these soldiers were from
during downtime at the factory, during harvest time, they were the same people.
And the army decided not to shoot.
There came a point where the regime called out the repression, and the repressers had agency and didn't repress.
And so that's what happens in these cases.
You never know when it's going to happen.
It's very hard to predict beforehand.
But there comes a moment where the people who are supposed to do the shooting decide not to shoot.
The people who are supposed to do the arresting, they decide not to arrest.
The people who are doing the surveillance, they decide to stop.
So you have this huge repressive apparatus, and it works until the moment the people in it decide not to do it anymore.
And so that's where the political legitimacy variable is ultimately.
decisive because those people who are killing under communism and decolectivizing those villages
and decouacizing and killing the people in their native village that they had grown up with,
if they hadn't done that, the regime couldn't have done this. The regime couldn't have collectivized.
Stalin wasn't out there shooting people. He was signing the decree, which then got transported through
the system, communicated through the system, to the point of the activist.
who enacted it or not, as the case might be.
When they don't enact, your power evaporates.
It's like a bank run.
You look at the bank and you think, wow, that's pretty solid.
They got these neoclassical columns.
It's all made out of stone.
Looks really impressive.
This bank is really solid.
And then one day, it gets in people's heads that the bank might not have your money.
The bank might not be good in reality.
for your paper holdings.
And so you rush the bank to try to get your money out
before that money is gone or doesn't exist.
And everybody gets that idea at the same time,
not just one person, and you get a bankroom.
And so this really solid institution
with these neoclassical stone columns
turns out to be evaporates, effervescent.
You can have a political bank.
in the repressive apparatus.
They cease thinking that they should kill people like themselves
on behalf of a system that they are no longer loyal to,
no longer adhering to.
That can happen in the forces of order, as we call them, in the repressive apparatus.
It can happen inside the elite.
Because when the leader gives the order, it's got to go through the whole chain of command.
The leader doesn't give the order to the soldier.
It goes to the one boss, the subordinate to that boss, the subordinate, and anywhere along the chain of command, there can be disloyalty and revolt.
There can be what we call political defection.
And so what motivates, what triggers political defection?
The lack of legitimacy, political illegitimacy.
People are not going to die for something that they no longer believe in.
And so that's a really big problem that the communist regime can't solve with tech.
And you say, well, the tech could produce power and prosperity, and China could re-legitimize its rule,
just like it did with the economic growth.
And so the economic growth did it for 30, 40 years, and that's how the regime legitimated itself.
And then the tech will do that for the next 30, 40 years.
The answer is that hasn't happened yet.
So maybe it can do that and maybe it can't, but it's never permanent.
What's permanent is power rooted in the people.
What's permanent is they're real citizens.
They have real freedoms.
They have the right to vote.
Now, they can't get what they want.
They go to the polls and they see bad candidate, worse candidate, even worse candidate.
But they can punish what they don't like.
they can exercise that agency.
They can be citizens.
They can realize their citizenship,
just like we do as consumers in the marketplace,
consumers of podcasts.
And so that's where you get legitimacy from,
where the system enables people, opportunity at home,
opportunity for people who otherwise don't have opportunity.
That's legitimacy.
That's priceless.
China doesn't have that.
Russia doesn't have that.
Stalin had that legitimacy for a time based upon the idea that he was building a new world
and overcoming the horrors of capitalism and imperialism and world war.
And Khrushchev gave a second win to that,
even as he was revealing more of the horrors.
And then that just ran out.
And they unwittingly destroyed the system trying to give it a third wind.
under Gorbachev.
And so they have no way forward.
They're stuck.
They can't do structural reform
and maintain their power.
But without structural reform,
without a legitimate system,
they also can't maintain their power forever.
So it's really interesting.
In the short run, we're all dead.
Because there could be a World War III.
But in the long run, we're all good
because our system is better.
So we have to get, elongate the short run.
No world war between the U.S. and China.
Get to the long run.
Get to the competition.
Get to the Cold War instead of hot war
where we're not having hot war.
That's the beauty of Cold War.
It's not hot war.
You can compete.
You can have tensions.
You can have rivalries,
but you don't have hot war.
And so in the short run,
potentially we're all dead
because the World War with great powers,
it was 55 million in World War II, the low estimate of deaths.
That was a multiple of World War I,
and World War III would be a multiple of World War II.
If we can avoid that, in the long run, we're good.
It's the opposite of what Keene said about in the long run, we're all dead.
It's in the short run that we're potentially dead.
But I like the long run, and so the tech and China thing might work,
and it might not work, but it's not permanent, even if it does work.
All right, great note to close on.
Thank you so much for coming on the podcast.
It was a real pleasure to talk to you.
My pleasure.
I apologize for not being succinct in my answers,
but if you've read some of my books, not all of them,
some of them go on at length.
A few of them are short, though.
And I have to master the answers to questions on podcasts
in order to be able to get through your whole magnificent list.
Maybe next time we'll do better.
Yes.
The long run
or the long drawdown is why we
why I want you on the podcast, right?
A lot of these issues are complicated, so I appreciate you doing it.
I hope you enjoyed this episode.
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