B. The Struggle Against Communism
We
will now consider organizations whose main purpose is not the construction of a
proper social order but rather the struggle against communism. For reasons
already expounded in this work, we deem this kind of organization to be
legitimate and often even indispensable. Of course, in saying this, we are not
identifying the Counter-Revolution with abuses that organizations of this kind
may have committed in one country or another.
Nevertheless, we believe that the counter-revolutionary efficacy of such
organizations can be greatly increased if their members, while remaining within
the sphere of their specialized activities, keep certain essential truths in
mind:
REVISED TO HERE
· Only an intelligent
refutation of communism is efficacious. The mere repetition of catch phrases,
even when clever and apt, is insufficient.
· This refutation,
when made in cultured circles, must be aimed at the ultimate doctrinal
foundations of communism. It is important to point out its essential character
as a philosophical sect that deduces from its principles a particular concept
of man, society, the State, history, culture, and so on, just as the Church
deduces from Revelation and Moral Law al the principles of Catholic
civilization and culture. Accordingly, no conciliation is possible between
communism – a sect that contains the plenitude of the Revolution -- and the
Church.
· So-called
scientific communism is unknown by the multitudes, and the doctrine of Marx
does not attract the masses. An ideological anticommunist action among the
general public must be aimed at a very widespread state of spirit that often
makes anticommunists ashamed to oppose communism. This state of spirit springs
from the more or less conscious idea that all inequality is unjust and that not
only great fortunes but even medium-sized ones must be eliminated, for if there
were no rich there would be no poor. This reveals vestiges of certain socialist
schools of thought of the nineteenth century, perfumed with romantic
sentimentalism. It gives rise to a mentality that claims to be anticommunist
but, nevertheless, frequently calls itself socialist.
This mentality, which is
becoming more and more powerful in the West, is a much greater danger than
Marxist indoctrination itself. It leads us slowly down a slope of concessions
that may reach the extreme point where nations on this side of the Iron Curtain
will have become communist republics. Such concessions, which show a tendency
to economic egalitarianism and state control, can be noted in every sphere.
Private enterprise is more and more limited. Inheritance taxes are so onerous
that in certain cases the federal treasury is the principal heir. Government
interference in such things as exchange, export, and import makes industry,
commerce, and banking dependent on the State. The State intervenes in wages,
rents, prices, in everything. It has industries, banks, universities,
newspapers, radio stations, television channels, and more. And while egalitarian
statism transforms the economy in this way, immorality and liberalism are
tearing the family apart and paving the way for so-called free love.
Unless this mentality is specifically fought, the West will be communist in
fifty or one hundred years, even should a cataclysm engulf Russia and China.
· The right of
property is so sacred that, even if a regime were to give the Church full
liberty and even full support, she could not accept as licit a social
organization in which all property were held collectively.
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