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Marxism Unmasked: From Delusion to Destruction
The lectures themselves I found provocative, stimulating
and highly rewarding. As a classic exposition of the virtues of
individualism and the evils of socialism, buttressed with an
impressive array of scholarship, they were unmatched. . . . I am
not trying to say that I became converted completely to the set of
ideas that Dr. Mises and the Freeman represent. But I do say that
any student or teacher of the social sciences who fails to think
deeply on these ideas is negligent and ill-informed, if not worse.
This feeling the seminar did leave me with. Certainly I personally
appreciate some of these ideas far more than I did a month ago.1
It is worth recalling the state of the world in 1952 when Ludwig von
Mises gave these lectures. Everywhere around the globe Soviet socialism
seemed to be on the march.World War II had left all of Eastern Europe in
the grip of the Soviet Union. In 1949, mainland China had fallen under
the control of Mao Zedong’s communist armies. In June of 1950 the
Korean War had broken out, and in 1952 American armies under the UN
flag were in a bloody stalemate along the 38th parallel against the forces of
North Korea and Communist China.
LUDWIG VON MISES - Personal Name
1st Edition
1-57246-210-8
NONE
Marxism Unmasked: From Delusion to Destruction
Management
English
Foundation for Economic Education.
2006
1-125
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