Communism is a socioeconomic policy that supports a classless society in which the government owns and controls all property and means of production. But, it is the opposite of capitalism, which is a policy upon which the U.S. economy is based. With communism, there is no business competition, and wealth is distributed equally among people. Leadership is another difference between communism and socialism. Communism requires authoritarian, single-party rule. Which sometimes results in force to control opposition. It is derived from ancient sources. The thought of a communist society was a response of the poor and dislocated of beginnings of modern communism. Communism was a basis for some utopian societies, but most communism experiments later were unsuccessful. Most of these communist experiments were small-scale private experiments, involving voluntary cooperation, with the population participating in the governing process. "Communist movements were often linked with Third World strivings for national independence and social change" ("Communism"). Every social system of the past, had been a ploy in which rich and powerful lives in the strive of the powerless many. Many methods of exploitation had flaws that sooner or later destroyed it. Communism was then reticent for philosophy progressed Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, who are authors of their Communist Manifesto and believed that the capitalist system was flawed as well and bound to destroy itself. The more productive the system was, the more difficult it would be to make it function. They believed that capitalism would eventually choke on its own wealth. Marx and Engels considered communism the highest form of socialism. Communism continues functioning within national, regional, and local governments. In communist states, the ruling parties hold a monopoly of power. Others participate in multiparty systems and are often part of a ruling coalition. Around the world,
Communism is a socioeconomic policy that supports a classless society in which the government owns and controls all property and means of production. But, it is the opposite of capitalism, which is a policy upon which the U.S. economy is based. With communism, there is no business competition, and wealth is distributed equally among people. Leadership is another difference between communism and socialism. Communism requires authoritarian, single-party rule. Which sometimes results in force to control opposition. It is derived from ancient sources. The thought of a communist society was a response of the poor and dislocated of beginnings of modern communism. Communism was a basis for some utopian societies, but most communism experiments later were unsuccessful. Most of these communist experiments were small-scale private experiments, involving voluntary cooperation, with the population participating in the governing process. "Communist movements were often linked with Third World strivings for national independence and social change" ("Communism"). Every social system of the past, had been a ploy in which rich and powerful lives in the strive of the powerless many. Many methods of exploitation had flaws that sooner or later destroyed it. Communism was then reticent for philosophy progressed Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, who are authors of their Communist Manifesto and believed that the capitalist system was flawed as well and bound to destroy itself. The more productive the system was, the more difficult it would be to make it function. They believed that capitalism would eventually choke on its own wealth. Marx and Engels considered communism the highest form of socialism. Communism continues functioning within national, regional, and local governments. In communist states, the ruling parties hold a monopoly of power. Others participate in multiparty systems and are often part of a ruling coalition. Around the world,