this post was submitted on 07 Feb 2026
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Communism, socialism, and the theoretically fairer alternatives I speak of have a number of possible implementations and, for the reasons I mentioned above, virtually no untainted historical examples for us to cleanly learn from. Every time someone takes a crack at it, the circumstances are unique and the powers looking to sabotage the system or seize it for themselves are different. It usually gets dismantled or becomes so corrupted as to be nothing more than another attempt.
I know nothing about what happened in Egypt and I'm commenting solely on my general knowledge and the words you have provided me.
So the farmers had no assistance and no plan to implement this massive change? Land was just taken from a large owner and haphazardly distributed to poor farmers?
While I don't doubt that the loss of productivity has had a detrimental effect and caused harm, how were conditions for the laborers and those in poverty before this happened, when "productivity" was great? I'm not sure what the greater "good" conditions would be since I'm not familiar with the situation, the region, or its struggles. It is just notable that your description focuses on productivity.
Nationalized tends to mean state ownership rather than distributed or worker ownership. Who were the factories "given to" and what does that mean? Again, was there a plan or were they just seized and handed off without serious consideration for how they should be managed and maintained?
Perhaps there is a reason I've never heard of the Egyptian communism you speak of. It sounds like it was not implemented with any kind of long term plan and, unsurprisingly, didn't achieve very much. Or it might just be that it received little attention because it wasn't a country of "white" people.