this post was submitted on 18 Sep 2025
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not sure how it was elsewhere, but i get the impression that in hungary, essentially nobody believed the marxist education in my parents' generation (born in the 1950s). to them, it was just some bullshit the state pushed on them and they learned just enough of it to pass.
so i'm not sure how good that education was, if this is how people reacted to it. even people whose parents had been communists before ww2, were hunted by the nazis during it, survived the horror, became party members in the newly born socialist states of the warsaw pact, etc.
It's a very interesting case. I think it could be a culmination of various factors, like:
Maybe teaching Marxism through formal education, like any other discipline, isn't as effective to disseminate the ideology. It would seem like a mandatory chore than a voluntary venture.
The children of the communist partisans did not live through the harsh times of feudal oppression or fascist rule. The more time that passes, the less the people are connected to the original spirit of the revolution, especially when the later generations of the USSR were living in very comfortable conditions.
nr 2 is definitely a thing. the people that did the counterrevolution in hungary took all the advantages the system provided to them as granted, and imagined they would keep all that but also get treats and riches, like the workers in mythical western european welfare states.
I've heard the same thing about ML courses in DDR universities. The students weren't interested and many professors couldn't care less as well.