Sample Essay on:
Analysis of Karl Marx’ “The Communist Manifesto”

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Essay / Research Paper Abstract

A 2.5 page paper which examines how Karl Marx interpreted the ideal government and compares his view with the current global economy. No additional sources are used.

Page Count:

2 pages (~225 words per page)

File: TG15_TGmarglo.rtf

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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:

buying and selling of goods and services. Societies were restructured and classes emerged, with their status based largely on income. Inequities developed, as the classes with greater status dominated society and politics, and controlled most of the business, while the lowly classes were being exploited to turn a profit, earning substandard wages and living in squalor. By the mid nineteenth century, there emerged two very different groups "the haves," or the master class, and "the have nots," or the working class. To the working class which constituted a social majority, it appeared that everything in capitalism had a price, including themselves. German philosopher Karl Marx, along with Friedrich Engels, wrote The Communist Manifesto in 1848, which offered a concept of an "ideal" government, which, in stark contrast to capitalism, would provide the working class with its legitimate "piece of the economic pie." Marx believed that many of the problems with capitalists government stemmed from the fact that industries were owned by the wealthy few, who were reaping all the benefits. He proposed a communist form of government, in which the class system of inequality would be destroyed in favor of a structure in which all businesses and property would be owned by the workers. Marx wrote, "The distinguishing feature of Communism is not the abolition of property generally, but the abolition of bourgeois [property/business owner] property. But modern bourgeois private property... is based on class antagonisms, on the exploitation of the many by the few" (34). Marxs ideal government would abolish "property in land and application of all rents of land to public purposes," create "a heavy progressive or graduated income tax," abolish any right to inheritance, transfer emigrant or "rebel" property to the state, centralize all credit and communication ...

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