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The World's Most Powerful President?


Article # : 16940 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 4 / 1990  1,719 Words
Author : Richard W. Judy
Richard W. Judy is an economist and senior research fellow at the Hudson Institute in Indianapolis. He is coauthor of Workforce 2020 (Hudson Institute, 1997), a book about American workers in the twenty-first century.

       In early February, the Central Committee of the Communist Party accepted, after bitter argument, a Gorbachevian political platform that rejects many of the central tenets of Marxism-Leninism.
       
        The party of Lenin, according to this document, rejects the very notion of the dictatorship of the proletariat. The party of Stalin no longer claims a monopoly of power. The party of Khrushchev espouses universal, equal, and direct suffrage. The party of Brezhnev rejects bureaucratic rule. The party of Andropov advocates the separation of governmental powers.
       
        The lion, it would seem, is to lie down with the lamb, and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union is to become the guarantor of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
       
        Has the totalitarian larvam of Soviet communism entered a February chrysalis from which a lovely democratic butterfly is to emerge in late June at the 28th party congress?
       
        A more reasonable interpretation of these events would be that Mikhail Gorbachev has arrived belatedly at the conclusion that the Communist Party must change or die. He sees that Soviet citizens consider communist rule to be illegitimate and have become a people who may have reached their limits.
       
        Non-Slavic subjects of the Soviet empire are making their views known in the most unmistakable manner. From Estonia to Tadzhikistan, captive peoples denounce Muscovite colonialism, repudiate their local communist satraps, and cast their lots with popular fronts ... (1993 of 10171 Characters)
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