195 responses

  1. diego
    March 6, 2015

    i hate politics it dumb

    Reply

    • your face
      March 24, 2015

      cool to know

      Reply

    • BKLYN_Flamelord
      May 9, 2017

      Okay, I don’t think politics are dumb, I think that certain people in politics are dumb XD.

      Reply

    • BKLYN_Flamelord
      May 9, 2017

      According to the dictionary: Communism is: advocacy of a classless society in which private ownership has been abolished and the means of production and subsistence belong to the community. So this article did a pretty good job at defining it and comparing it to Democracy. I just kind of think that there would be some bigger differences.

      Reply

    • gerald nigga
      May 29, 2018

      your ed

      Reply

  2. YazhiniRangaraj
    October 3, 2015

    You mentioned ,”In Communism , the power is vested on a group of people who decide the course of Action”.My query is what kind of people is present in the group & how they are selected or elected?

    Reply

    • Dr. Dark
      March 30, 2016

      In a democracy too “power is vested on a group of people who decide the course of Action (sic)” i. e. a government/an administration. Only this is limited in time to election periods so voters can decide to have a new “group” every few years.

      Reply

    • John GrosVenor
      October 15, 2016

      Who decides….. it’s the elite, who have the wealth, can vacation in posh surroundings, great food, best of clothes. The elite!

      Reply

    • John GrosVenor
      October 15, 2016

      Who decides….. it’s the elite, who have the wealth, can vacation in posh surroundings, great food, best of clothes. The elite!
      However, in our country, there are the elitists who are the controllers. Well, it may very well be that these elitists who may espouse “democracy”, capitolism… free enterprise… may be wearing masks who speak in support of a democracy, but, in reality, are dictators

      Reply

  3. Narattam
    October 3, 2015

    I disgust communist-ism as it is totally against individual freedom. I believe in election power of the people. A group of people can not interfere in one`s personal affairs. I believe in tremendous liberty not doing any harm to others. I love democracy…..

    Reply

    • Rbredrose
      February 22, 2018

      What is individual freedom? And, what is the difference between the truth and the truth that sets you free, like the proverbial and the truth will set you free but not necessarily any or even Your truth? And, who be the wicked and who the unrighteous? I like this conversatiin you guys vs gals got going vs get going.? Please, amuse me or accuse me. @answeranyone. Lest, i the simple Simon? Thank You, Your Cleverness’.

      Reply

  4. shiju
    December 22, 2015

    Democracy creates richer and poor people. that is its major drawback

    Reply

    • TheMistakenPresident
      March 19, 2017

      And communism makes everyone equally poor. Except for those in charge, of course.

      Reply

    • Jason Roe
      November 13, 2019

      Not a drawback when realized that a democracy gives everyone the chance to become rich if they so choose (every person is allowed to act upon their free God given agency) this is deemed an inalienable right to pursue one’s own happiness. Communism steps on this right and the group of elites choose who gets to progress in society and who stays poor. It is said Communism is fair and classless…I disagree as there exists an elite class (the rich) and everyone else is equally poor and dependent on the rich who are the governing elites.

      Reply

  5. Tom Kara
    January 30, 2016

    This article needs major revisions. “Communism” essentially means a classless society with common ownership of the means of production. While terms like “the dictatorship of the proletariat” are associated with classical Marxism, that term refers to a situation existing BETWEEN capitalism and communism. Communism per se (as the above article incorrectly states) does not require “a group of people” to “decide on the activities of the public”. Indeed, the ideal communistic society would not only be classless, but the state itself is presumed to “wither away”. The condition of a stateless society is also the ideal of anarchism (the absence of political authority). Nineteenth century theorists such as Peter Kropotkin sought to prove that a tendency toward mutual aid, rather than selfish competition, was the natural human norm (his book “Mutual Aid” deals with this). There have been many forms of communistic societies – and many “primitive” societies are by nature communistic in terms of property, although they may have hierarchical power structures. Communism thus takes many forms. Christian communism is mentioned in the Bible (Acts 2 and 4), and religious communism is found among many belief systems. The Hutterites are modern day religious communists, living in “colonies” in the western United States and Canada with all property owned by the colony. Nor is communism per se anti-democratic. Indeed, in the sense that the people own the means of production it may be far more democratic than capitalism, which tends toward a condition of monopoly and concentration of real power by fewer and fewer people. Communistic societies can be run by democratic workers councils which are democratically elected. Capitalism on the other hand can be very anti-democratic, in that a few people may have control over the means of production, with the rest of society being under their employment (“wage slaves”) and often under their direct or indirect control. The presence of democratic institutions and forms of government in a capitalism society may or may not imply a limited degree of democratic input, since political life in the form of mass media, educational system and political parties is often controlled by the capitalist minority which owns the means of production. “Ruling class, ruling ideas” encapsulates that notion. Soviet “communism” as it developed under Stalin et al. was actually more like “state capitalism”, yet unfortunately many people equate “communism” with this undeveloped and perverted form. Even the Soviets would have admitted their society was not “communistic” in any final sense.

    Reply

  6. Pussykins
    September 5, 2016

    This is a stupid article. Communism and Democracy are not comparable. As the author correctly points out, Communism is a political ideology that defines a social and economic system, while Democracy is rule by the people, for the people. A state (or nation, community, village, etc) can have both, neither, or one or the other. The writer implies they are mutually exclusive, one or the other. He is wrong. The alternate social and economic system to Communism would be Capitalism, while the alternate to Democracy is Dictatorship.
    Unfortunately many tend to link Communism with Dictatorship, and Capitalism with Democracy, but it needn’t be so. Democratic Communism is possible, though rare (eg Kerala in India flirts with it), while Dictatorships tend to be a bastardisation of Capitalism (eg semi-free markets, but wealth & power controlled by the favoured).
    Most of the developed (& Democratic) world sits between Communism and Capitalism, utilising free markets with regulation, private ownership, but state provided (in varying degrees) welfare (unemployment, disabled, elderly), health, education, transport (public roads, trains, buses), policing, parks and recreation, etc.

    Reply

    • TheMistakenPresident
      March 19, 2017

      Correct. Thank you for your description.

      Reply

  7. kirsten
    March 7, 2017

    Both democrats and republicans support equality, what’s the difference.

    Reply

  8. kirsten
    March 7, 2017

    Both democrats and communists support equality.

    Reply

  9. nick
    April 20, 2017

    Point 3 is false. Democracy would not necessarily allow private property. If, for example, you had a democracy where the decisions of the majority were actually respected, it’s likely that the majority of workers, if given to understand the significance of private property –
    not as the idea of them owning their personal belongings or their home but as the foundation of their exploitation and the power of the rich – that these people would vote democratically to take collective, democratic, social ownership of the private property which they themselves as a class had produced. In that case, democracy would not sanction but abolish private property.

    Reply

  10. BKLYN_Flamelord
    May 9, 2017

    Cool this goes in depth into the differences, though it is a little weird to compare them. I believe that democracy is the best, as it allows individual freedom to select leaders. That is something I actually couldn’t really imagine living without.

    Reply

  11. michael nolan
    July 4, 2018

    This is a political post with little relation to reality. Communism is an economic system where the government owns and controls the means of production. In modern society its opposite isn’t democracy but capitalism, which is an economic system based upon private investment and driven by the profit motive.

    Democracy refers to a form of rule-making based on the popular will. In many small societies, such as clubs, it is often a direct democracy based upon one person, one vote. In governments, it is usually a representative system wherein people vote for their rulers who then make decisions.

    There is no reason to assume that a socialist or communist system cannot also be democratic–look at Salvador Allende’s Chile in 1970, for example. Religous organizations such as the earliest Christians or some modern-day groups of monks or nuns are also examples of communist societies that are also democratic.

    Nor is there any reason to believe that democratic societies are automatically egalitarian. The most famous direct democracy was that of ancient Athens, which excluded both women and slaves. Israel is an example of a modern government which excludes a large group of people (Palestinians) from democratic decision-making.

    Few representative “democracies” today a true democracies, but in fact are oligarchies ruled by an elite (even if there are some democratic institutions, such as elections).

    Similarly, there are few if any true capitalistic societies, but mostly mixed economies which employ some features of capitalism with certain features of socialism. There is certainly nothing “democratic” about a large corporation where the workers have virtually no say about working conditions, pay, or profits.

    Reply

  12. Kevin
    July 27, 2018

    Communism is a stateless economy. It cannot be a type of government, only a means by which goods are bartered and labor is valued. There is no “power is vested in a group of people”. All men are equal and individual freedom is maximized. The economic definition is the only one that is correct. The political definition is insanely dishonest crap.

    Reply

  13. Hugh Ballz
    August 11, 2018

    The only thing they have in common is that none of them work.

    Reply

  14. Jaay
    February 7, 2022

    The difference is communist has less crime and less entitlement – a democracy has more snowflakes and as a result more violent crime when they throw a tantrum.

    Reply

  15. Apagu Adamu
    February 26, 2022

    You mentioned ,”In Communism , the power is vested on a group of people who decide the course of Action”.My query is what kind of people is present in the group & how they are selected or elected?

    Reply

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