>From 1872!
The reasoning of Marx ends in absolute contradiction. Taking into account only 
the economic question, he insists that only the most advanced countries, those 
in which capitalist production has attained greatest development, are the most 
capable of making social revolution. 
These civilized countries, to the exclusion of all others, are the only ones 
destined to initiate and carry through this revolution. This revolution will 
expropriate either by peaceful, gradual, or by violent means, the present 
property owners and capitalists. To appropriate all the landed property and 
capital, and to carry out its extensive economic and political programs, the 
revolutionary State will have to be very powerful and highly centralized. 
The State will administer and direct the cultivation of the land, by means of 
its salaried officials commanding armies of rural workers organized and 
disciplined for this purpose. At the same time, on the ruins of the existing 
banks, it will establish a single state bank which will finance all labor and 
national commerce.

It is readily apparent how such a seemingly simple plan of organization can 
excite the imagination of the workers, who are as eager for justice as they are 
for freedom; and who foolishly imagine that the one can exist without the 
other; as if, in order to conquer and consolidate justice and equality, one 
could depend on the efforts of others, particularly on governments, regardless 
of how they may be elected or controlled, to speak and act for the people!
 For the proletariat this will, in reality, be nothing but a barracks: a 
regime, where regimented workingmen and women will sleep, wake, work, and live 
to the beat of a drum; where the shrewd and educated will be granted government 
privileges; and where the mercenary-minded, attracted by the immensity of the 
international speculations of the state bank, will find a vast field for 
lucrative, underhanded dealings.

There will be slavery within this state, and abroad there will be war without 
truce, at least until the “inferior” races, Latin and Slav, tired of bourgeois 
civilization, no longer resign themselves to the subjection of a State, which 
will be even more despotic than the former State, although it calls itself a 
People’s State.

Mikhail Bakunin 1872

The reasoning of Balaji also immediately ends in absolute contradiction.

https://marxwords.blogspot.com/

New Statesman Balaji Srinivasan, venture capitalist and former CTO of Coinbase, 
has highlighted the real purpose of Bitcoin and its implications for 
geopolitical and financial issues. Srinivasan stated that Bitcoin at its core 
is a “political revolution,” because it challenges the centralized states’ 
business model, and the change brought by it will be fought by states who will 
try to seize it.

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