{"id":127,"date":"2026-05-12T09:29:08","date_gmt":"2026-05-12T12:29:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/crpnews.com\/asia\/?p=127"},"modified":"2026-05-12T09:29:09","modified_gmt":"2026-05-12T12:29:09","slug":"lars-lihs-what-was-bolshevism-the-trap-of-continuity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/crpnews.com\/asia\/lars-lihs-what-was-bolshevism-the-trap-of-continuity\/","title":{"rendered":"Lars Lih&#8217;s What Was Bolshevism: The Trap of Continuity"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Doug Enaa Greene<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>The Canadian academic Lars Lih is an independent scholar of Soviet history with a particular focus on Lenin and Bolshevism. Lih\u2019s magnum opus <em>Lenin Rediscovered <\/em>(2005) is a serious study of Lenin\u2019s <em>What is To Be Done?<\/em> (<em>WITBD<\/em>), in which he challenged Cold War caricatures of the Bolshevik leader as an elitist bent on totalitarian domination. In this work, Lih proved that Lenin was a dedicated Marxist committed to the emancipation of the working class.<\/p>\n<p><em>What Was Bolshevism?<\/em> includes many of Lih\u2019s previously published essays on Bolshevism and the Russian Revolution. The nineteen chapters cover a multitude of topics such as war communism, the New Economic Policy, Stalinism, and <em>perestroika<\/em>. In contrast to <em>Lenin Rediscovered<\/em>, Lih deemphasizes Lenin and focuses on leading communists such as Trotsky, Bukharin, Stalin, and Zinoviev to understand the meaning of Bolshevism. In erudite and accessible writing, Lih deconstructs longstanding myths on the Left and Right. Still, Lih cannot truly understand Bolshevism since his methodology is marred by textual formalism and an overemphasis on political continuity.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Bolshevism and Kautskyism<\/h2>\n<p>In contrast to the rest of the book, Lih\u2019s introductory chapter centers around Lenin and repeats his previous arguments on <em>WITBD<\/em>. Following <em>Lenin Rediscovered<\/em>, he claims both Cold Warriors and leftist activists have largely misunderstood Lenin since they considered <em>WITBD<\/em> to be the foundational text of Bolshevism. Rather, Lih claims that Bolshevism\u2019s political ideas adhered to the orthodox Marxism of Karl Kautsky: \u201cI assume the essential continuity of Bolshevism\u2019s message from its beginnings\u2026 Much of my writing over the last decade or so has examined the case for the alleged ruptures in 1914 and 1917 and found them wanting.\u201d (p. 4)<\/p>\n<p>Lih argues that <em>WITBD<\/em> did not advocate a \u201cparty of a new type\u201d or a vanguard organization of proletarian revolutionaries. Rather, Lenin\u2019s political ideas followed the model of the German Social Democratic Party as codified by Karl Kautsky\u2019s <em>Erfurt Program<\/em>: \u201cThis book defined Social Democracy for Russian activists \u2013 it was the book one read to find out what it meant to be a Social Democrat. In 1894, a young provincial revolutionary named Vladimir Ulianov translated <em>The Erfurt Program<\/em> into Russian just at the time he was acquiring his life-long identity as a revolutionary Social Democrat.\u201d (p. 45)<\/p>\n<p>Kautsky\u2019s ideal was that social democracy should be the party of the whole class \u2013 embracing all tendencies of the working-class movement. The implication of Lenin\u2019s arguments in <em>WITBD<\/em> was that the party could not be \u201ca party of the whole class.\u201d Due to the uneven nature of consciousness inside the working class, the party should seek to organize its advanced layers. This was not in order to create a conspiratorial organization, but because a disciplined and centralized party of Marxists could act more effectively in the working-class movement than a loose and undisciplined one.<\/p>\n<p>Kautsky believed that the steady accumulation of votes and parliamentary seats by social democracy guaranteed victory, meaning the party did not have to engage in revolutionary action. In effect, history would inevitably go their way. In contrast to Kautsky\u2019s \u201crevolutionary\u201d fatalism, Lenin\u2019s approach was dominated by what Georg Luk\u00e1cs called the \u201cactuality of revolution.\u201d This meant he viewed every action by the party as crucial links in a chain leading to the goal of proletarian revolution. This viewpoint had drastic effects on how Lenin envisioned the role of a communist party. For Lenin, a vanguard party was not a vehicle for collecting votes, nor did it passively await the revolution. While revolution could only happen in certain situations, this did not mean that communists could not prepare for it now. It was imperative for the party to carry out revolutionary agitation in non-revolutionary situations in order to organize forces for when the moment of overturn arrived.<\/p>\n<p>Lih notes the similarities between Lenin and Kautsky\u2019s language, but he does not see the gulf that separated them in terms of action. German Social Democracy betrayed its socialist commitments in World War I and the German Revolution of 1918. By contrast, the Bolsheviks successfully mobilized the working class against capitalism and the Tsar. In both theory and practice, Bolshevism meant a repudiation of Kautsky\u2019s Erfurtian politics.<\/p>\n<p>If all Lih was doing was highlighting the influence of Kautsky on Lenin, then there would be no objection. Lenin himself recognized his political debt to Kautsky. Yet Lih goes further than that and stresses that there were few, if any, breaks in Lenin\u2019s ideas. It is certainly true that Lenin emerged from within the Second International and used its language and formulations. However, he developed something radically new from that raw material. On a host of ideas ranging from the vanguard party, the state, imperialism, philosophy, and socialist revolution, Lenin\u2019s Bolshevism was vastly different from Kautsky\u2019s \u201cOrthodox Marxism.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>You might be interested in: <\/em><\/strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.leftvoice.org\/why-kautsky-was-wrong-and-why-you-should-care\/\"><strong><em>Why Kautsky Was Wrong (and Why You Should Care)<\/em><\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n<p>As a result, Lih\u2019s Kautskyization of Lenin transforms Bolshevism from a distinctive revolutionary current into just unoriginal followers of Kautsky and social democracy. In effect, this amounts to a delegitimization of Leninism and its replacement by Kautskyism. By stressing the aspect of continuity over discontinuity in Lenin, Lih cannot comprehend Bolshevism. Lih\u2019s method is one devoid of dialectics, discontinuity, and ruptures. For those interested in a more in-depth discussion on the problems of Lih\u2019s approach, I encourage you to read my <a href=\"https:\/\/www.routledge.com\/The-New-Reformism-and-the-Revival-of-Karl-Kautsky-The-Renegades-Revenge\/Greene\/p\/book\/9781032758787?fbclid=IwY2xjawHAAdlleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHc5UnGVRUA7aWaoVC6SHepejy0wA-s8_2szpVJPJkHUGRNVpEGT3voLx_g_aem_xxaHDlVRuu5YyNclbrhR0Q\"><em>The New Reformism and the Revival of Karl Kautsky<\/em><\/a> which is summarized <a href=\"https:\/\/firebrand.red\/2024\/05\/why-kautsky-was-wrong-and-why-you-should-care\/\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">War Communism<\/h2>\n<p>At least half of Lih\u2019s book is devoted to Bolshevik debates surrounding \u201cwar communism.\u201d Following the October Revolution, the Bolsheviks were confronted with economic collapse, foreign invasion, and civil war. In response, Lenin, Trotsky, and the Soviet leadership implemented policies to militarize labor and requisition grain from the peasants in order to feed the army. These policies were known as \u201cwar communism.\u201d Lih challenges the consensus on war communism from scholars such as Moshe Lewin, Isaac Deutscher, Sheila Fitzpatrick, Orlando Figes, and Martin Malia that see these policies as a deluded fantasy where the Bolsheviks genuinely believed they were entering communism itself: \u201cThe myth of a leap into communism, of euphoria-induced hallucination, of a \u2018short-cut to communism\u2019, of glorification of coercion as the royal road to communism, etc., is still dominant in most works that reach the larger reading public.\u201d (p. 7)<\/p>\n<p>Leon Trotsky\u2019s <em>Terrorism and Communism<\/em> (1920) is generally singled out as the emblematic Bolshevik text embodying the utopian hopes about war communism. In a chapter devoted to <em>Terrorism and Communism<\/em> (originally published in 2007), Lih performs a valuable service by noting that Trotsky did not believe these fantasies. Rather, the coercive policies advanced in <em>Terrorism and Communism<\/em> were not meant to presage communism but were emergency measures to deal with societal collapse: \u201cWe find in Trotsky\u2019s speeches of 1920 innumerable variations on two overriding themes. One is the austere \u2018blood, sweat and tears\u2019 evocation of the economic ruin facing the country unless extraordinary efforts were made. The other is an insistence on the manifold difficulties created by the breakdown of the capitalist system combined with the primitive, incomplete \u2018caricature\u2019 version of socialist institutions set up during the war.\u201d (p. 252)<\/p>\n<p>Lih\u2019s penetrating analysis of <em>Terrorism and Communism<\/em> stands in stark contrast to Trotsky-sympathetic writers such as Ernest Mandel, Isaac Deutscher, and Tony Cliff. They viewed <em>Terrorism and Communism<\/em> as Trotsky\u2019s \u201cworst book\u201d which foreshadowed the authoritarian politics of Stalinism. Lih effectively challenges that position by situating Trotsky\u2019s proposals in the concrete circumstances of civil war and as a sensible answer to save the revolution from collapse. For Lih, Trotsky was not a bloodthirsty utopian but was an eminently practical revolutionary leader.<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>You might be <\/em><\/strong>interested<strong><em> in: <\/em><\/strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.leftvoice.org\/kautsky-luxemburg-and-lenin-in-light-of-the-german-revolution\/\"><strong><em>Kautsky, Luxemburg, and Lenin in Light of the German Revolution<\/em><\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The Slovenian philosopher Slavoj \u017di\u017eek relied upon Lih in his introduction to Verso\u2019s edition of <a href=\"https:\/\/www.versobooks.com\/products\/2022-terrorism-and-communism?srsltid=AfmBOooKg0AY-cg5etI8xepXPbRtQ_EAqxZBGnOgAjeVt5JLv9DQdGse\"><em>Terrorism and Communism<\/em><\/a>. \u017di\u017eek views Trotsky largely as an icon of revolutionary hopes, but not as a theorist who can tackle the material conditions of the Russian Civil War or understand the Stalinist Thermidor. Despite his Lacanian verbiage, \u017di\u017eek\u2019s work benefits immensely from Lih\u2019s historical research. As Harrison Fluss <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historicalmaterialism.org\/the-prophet-avec-lacan\/\">noted<\/a> in his overview: \u201c\u017di\u017eek\u2019s intervention is an important one in that he promotes Lih\u2019s reconstruction of Trotsky\u2019s work and at least attempts to rescue Trotsky\u2019s <em>Terrorism and Communism<\/em> from undeserved oblivion. He challenges us to read Trotsky anew, free of stereotypes and clich\u00e9s.\u201d<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Nikolai Bukharin<\/h2>\n<p>If there is a central figure in <em>What Was Bolshevism<\/em>, then it is the Marxist theorist Nikolai Bukharin. As Lih admits, Bukharin plays an oversized role in the revolution and appears in most chapters. Bukharin\u2019s prominence can partly be explained by the influence of Stephen Cohen (Bukharin\u2019s major English language biographer) who was Lih\u2019s personal friend and mentor. For Lih, Bukharin\u2019s place in Bolshevism is analogous to Kautsky in German Social Democracy: \u201cLet me make a comparison that both sides would reject with indignation: Bukharin was the Karl Kautsky of Bolshevism. Just as Kautsky was the authoritative spokesman of revolutionary Social Democracy over several decades, Bukharin played the same role for the post-war heir of revolutionary Social Democracy.\u201d (p. 23)<\/p>\n<p>The overview of Bukharin\u2019s work enables Lih to explain the essentials of the Bolshevik <em>Weltanschauung<\/em>:<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>This underlying outlook was based on a narrative about the heroic mission of the proletariat: the proletariat conquered and defended a new state authority in order to be able to build a benevolent mono-organizational society by drawing peasant farms into a unified socialist framework. Civil war and social collapse were close-to-inevitable consequences of proletarian revolution: they imposed high but justifiable costs. After a new equilibrium had been painfully established, society could proceed more smoothly toward a completely organized and planned society. (p. 335)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In several chapters, Lih performs a detailed textual analysis of Bukharin\u2019s major works such as <a href=\"https:\/\/www.marxists.org\/archive\/bukharin\/works\/1920\/abc\/index.htm\"><em>The ABC of Communism<\/em><\/a> (1919) and <em>The Economics and Politics of the Transition Period<\/em> (1920). Lih believes that Bukharin, like Trotsky, was a practical leader who did not believe war communism was the beginning of a classless society.<\/p>\n<p>Similar to his analysis of Lenin, Lih claims Bukharin maintained a consistent political outlook throughout his life. For example, Lih argues that Bukharin\u2019s views underwent no major changes from war communism to the adoption of a semi-market economy under the New Economic Policy (NEP) in 1921. This reasoning leads Lih to conclude that Bukharin\u2019s gradualist strategy in the 1920s was consistent with his earlier \u201cleft communist\u201d views: \u201cAll in all, Bukharin\u2019s views support an interpretation of war communism and NEP that puts much greater emphasis on the continuity in the Bolshevik outlook during these two periods.\u201d (p. 337)<\/p>\n<p>Moreover, Lih claims Bukharin\u2019s pro-NEP political strategy did not imply an embrace of market socialism but was a viable path to communism: \u201cI take\u00a0Bukharin\u00a0seriously when he insists that the NEP was neither a retreat nor a cause for serious rethinking but a strategy that was genuinely meant to overcome the market.\u201d (p. 336) While Lih is correct that Bukharin did not advocate utopian delusions during war communism, his views did drastically shift with the adoption of the NEP. By stressing continuity, Lih cannot appreciate the development and changes in Bukharin\u2019s positions.<\/p>\n<p>During the 1920s, Bukharin, alongside Stalin, was a major champion of the NEP and market mechanisms against Trotsky and the Left Opposition. What stands out with Bukharin was that he advocated a serious approach to deal with real problems. The weakness in his strategy was the assumption that capitalist economics in the Soviet countryside could gradually and painlessly \u201cgrow\u201d into socialist relations. As a result, Bukharin did not see the growing class polarization in the countryside and the breakdown of the NEP at the end of the 1920s.<\/p>\n<p>If Bukharin\u2019s line had somehow prevailed, then the USSR would likely have possessed a thin veneer of \u201csocialism\u201d while being largely governed by capitalist social relations \u2014 he would have ended up as the Soviet Deng Xiaoping. While this cannot be proven definitively since his line was defeated, Stephen Cohen has noted that market reformers in the USSR, China, and Eastern Europe echoed Bukharin\u2019s arguments, programs, philosophies, and theories. Even Lih observed that the celebration of the NEP during p<em>erestroika<\/em> signified the restoration of capitalism: \u201cWith the detachment of hindsight, we can see that the perestroika reformers found NEP attractive, not as a pathway <em>toward<\/em> the mono-organizational society, as Bukharin did, but rather <em>away<\/em> from it.\u201d (p. 30)<\/p>\n<p>Lih\u2019s focus on continuity also means he glosses over changes in Bukharin\u2019s philosophy. In the 1930s, when Bukharin was under arrest and awaiting trial, he wrote <em>The Philosophical Arabesques<\/em>. As a work of Marxist philosophy, Bukharin\u2019s book ranks alongside Luk\u00e1cs\u2019s <em>The Destruction of Reason<\/em> and Engels\u2019s <em>Anti-D\u00fchring<\/em>. Throughout this work, Bukharin strikes back against the Stalinist vulgarization of dialectical materialism and dismissal of Hegel. Bukharin returned to first principles by defending Hegel, Spinoza, and monism. Yet Lih admits in the book <a href=\"https:\/\/www.haymarketbooks.org\/books\/920-cataclysm-1914\"><em>Cataclysm 1914<\/em><\/a> that Hegel and philosophical questions are \u201coutside my competence.\u201d (p. 389) This means he cannot recognize the philosophical stakes in Bukharin\u2019s work.<\/p>\n<p>Lih\u2019s fixation on surface appearances means he cannot appreciate Bukharin\u2019s Aesopian approach. He minimizes the fact that Bukharin was Stalin\u2019s prisoner and a dead man on leave. In order to save his work for posterity, Bukharin was forced to write in code by praising Stalin. As Helena Sheehan notes in her introduction to <em>The Philosophical Arabesques<\/em>, Bukharin was speaking in code to future generations: \u201cAs other commentators have suggested, his trial testimony, as well as his prison manuscripts, must be read as a coded attempt to communicate covertly something sometimes utterly at odds with what he was asserting overtly.\u201d (<em>The Philosophical Arabesques<\/em>, p. 24) Instead, Lih takes the praise of Stalin in Bukharin\u2019s prison writings at face value: \u201cI myself belong to the Horton school of Bukharin interpretation: like the Dr Seuss character of that name, Bukharin by and large meant what he said and said what he meant. I do not mean to apply this to every last bit of Stalin flattery, but I do think Bukharin had persuaded himself that, despite inevitable difficulties, Stalin\u2019s Russia was on the high road to socialism.\u201d (p. 400)<\/p>\n<p>The Aesopian language in Bukharin\u2019s prison writings served another purpose as well. As a committed antifascist, Bukharin considered his work to be theoretical weapons for the USSR in the struggle against Nazi Germany and fascist irrationalism. In private correspondence with Stalin, he begged the General Secretary to publish his writings, even if his name was removed: \u201cI wrote [the prison manuscripts] mostly at night, literally wrenching them from my heart. I fervently beg you not to let this work disappear\u2026 Don\u2019t let this work, perish\u2026 This is completely apart from my personal fate.\u201d (<em>The Philosophical Arabesques<\/em>, p. 16)<\/p>\n<p>While Bukharin was sincere in his support of socialism and the USSR, he did not extend that to Stalin. At his 1938 trial, Bukharin used coded language to turn the tables on his prosecutors and speak to the larger court of world history. In her memoirs, his widow Anna Larina noted that Bukharin defied Stalin at his trial while maintaining his belief in Soviet socialism: \u201cBut the most amazing thing is that, despite everything, the time of shining hopes had not passed for him. He would pay for these hopes with his head. Moreover, one reason for his preposterous confessions in the dock\u2014incomplete, but sufficiently egregious confessions\u2014was precisely this: he still hoped that the idea to which he had dedicated his life would triumph.\u201d (<em>This I Cannot Forget<\/em>, p. 305) By contrast, Lih is unable to disentangle the differing meanings of socialism and Stalin in Bukharin\u2019s works.<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>You might be interested in: <\/em><\/strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.leftvoice.org\/lenin-kautsky-and-the-state\/\"><strong><em>Lenin, Kautsky, and the State<\/em><\/strong><\/a><\/p>\n<p>If we were to follow Lih\u2019s \u201cHorton school\u201d on Bukharin\u2019s show trial, then we would end up accepting his confessions to fantastic crimes as genuine. Lih never quite goes this far and does acknowledge Bukharin\u2019s resistance: \u201cIt is likely that the full meaning of this duel must be sought in the long-standing and highly intense personal relations between Stalin and Bukharin. For our purposes, we should note that Bukharin\u2019s resistance was partly a struggle against the genre of classical melodrama that Stalin wished to impose on him.\u201d (p. 453) Yet the implicit logic of the \u201cHorton school\u201d can easily find itself justifying a Stalinist narrative.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Continuity and Discontinuity<\/h2>\n<p>There is undoubted value in Lih\u2019s work in providing a textual exegesis to the writings of Lenin, Trotsky, Bukharin, and other Bolsheviks. He is more than capable of unearthing documents and<\/p>\n<p>then comparing them to find a common language and continuity. Yet this textual methodology also possesses severe limits. Lih thinks it is sufficient to look at one\u2019s ideas and how they are presented instead of looking at their actual practice and distinctiveness. Lih\u2019s formalism means he sees practice as almost a dirty activity and not worthy of attention.<\/p>\n<p>By prioritizing continuity, Lih cannot grasp the true breaks that occur in political life.<br \/>\nThroughout the book, he privileges continuity in Bolshevism which is further extended backward to Kautsky and then forward to Bukharin, Zinoviev, and others. The shared Kautskyist heritage of Bolshevism explains Lih\u2019s softness on Stalin, who had a very mechanical and stagist view of Marxism similar to Kautsky\u2019s. Thus, Lih sees Stalin as part of a common Kautskyist-Bolshevik family and a true believer in world revolution: \u201cStalin was not hypocritical in his support for world revolution, since from his point of view no sacrifice of state interests was involved. His caution about revolutionary prospects in particular cases did not mean he dismissed all revolutionary prospects for the foreseeable future.\u201d (p. 365)<\/p>\n<p>Since he believes there are no fundamental differences between Bolshevism and Stalinism, Lih can easily include texts from the latter as answering the book\u2019s central questions. For example, he observes that Stalin\u2019s 1938 <em>Short Course<\/em> possessed a strident defense of the Bolshevik party line: \u201cThe real hero of the <em>Short Course<\/em> is the Bolshevik party line. The party line, based solidly on a knowledge of the laws of history, is forced to fight against innumerable critics and scoffers from right and left and goes on from triumph to triumph \u2013 this is the narrative of the <em>Short Course<\/em>.\u201d (p. 517)<\/p>\n<p>Stalin could certainly use the appropriate Marxist language when needed. For that matter, so could Kautsky. Superficially, it could be claimed that Stalinists and social democrats were Marxists due to their slogans and party membership. However, their words and actions represented a clear break from Bolshevism. In order to understand Bolshevism, it is necessary to do more than accept slogans at face value.<\/p>\n<p>Lih claims not to provide his \u201cown answer\u201d to the meaning of Bolshevism, but this is inaccurate. He stresses the \u201cunderlying continuity and a gradual metamorphosis\u201d (p. 1) of Bolshevism throughout its history \u2014 a relatively seamless transition going from Kautsky to Lenin to Bukharin to Stalin. Ultimately, by seeing just the continuity and not the breaks between Kautskyism, Bolshevism, and Stalinism, Lih misses the main and overarching points.<\/p>\n<p><em>Lars T. Lih, <\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.haymarketbooks.org\/books\/2580-what-was-bolshevism\">What Was Bolshevism?<\/a><em> (Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2024), 582 pages. $45.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In What Is Bolshevism, Lars Lih collects a number of his essays arguing there was a fundamental continuity from Karl Kautsky to V.I. Lenin. Doug Greene explains why this is wrong \u2014 and leads Lih to apologize for Stalinism.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8,"featured_media":128,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"crp_sub_category":"","crp_read_time":"","crp_featured":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[25,23,19],"coauthors":[68],"class_list":["post-127","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-theory","tag-anti-war","tag-labor","tag-marxism"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.7 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Lars Lih&#8217;s What Was Bolshevism: The Trap of Continuity - Permanent Revolution \u2013 Fourth International (Asia)<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/crpnews.com\/asia\/lars-lihs-what-was-bolshevism-the-trap-of-continuity\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Lars Lih&#8217;s What Was Bolshevism: The Trap of Continuity - Permanent Revolution \u2013 Fourth International (Asia)\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In What Is Bolshevism, Lars Lih collects a number of his essays arguing there was a fundamental continuity from Karl Kautsky to V.I. 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