Political Science, asked by jmicahsayon, 7 months ago

What do Karl Marx think of League of Nations

Answers

Answered by ItzVash003
7

Answer:

I think you did hear something like the Legaue of the Just, or the Legaue of the Just Man…

That make more sense than the Legaue of the Nations, what was formed much later.

The League of Just Men was said to be an extension of the Illuminati, which was forced to go deep underground after it was exposed by a raid in 1786 conducted by the Bavarian authorities.

Karl Marx was hesitant about joining the League due to political disagreements, but was convinced by Joseph Moll that he could be more influential debating as a member from within the organization when Moll visited in January 1847. In June 1847, the League of the Just merged with the Communist

Answered by ayush7652051895sl
3

Answer:

  • Long before the League of Nations was established, Marx passed away.
  • If he had lived to see it, he most certainly would have viewed it as a reactionary group established by bourgeois and aristocratic states with the goal of "peacefully" dividing the world among numerous empires.
  • The League of Nations is unlikely to have left a lasting impression on Marx, and he would have detested its fervent anti-communist sentiments.
  • Marx undoubtedly would have had some harsh words to say about the White Armies being sponsored by the League of Nations and the attempted counterrevolution in Civil War Russia.

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