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Communism, at least in the Marxist understanding, is essentially a fully collectivized mode of production and distribution. It will necessarily have administration as is required for mass production, and this entails hierarchy and centralization. Socialism is "authoritarian" in that the working classes use the state against capitalists and fascists, but this is a requirement for building communism, which is stateless, classless, and moneyless. It's no coincidence that the overwhelming majority of communists support the PRC, Vietnam, Laos, DPRK, Cuba, and former USSR, as these are all states where socialism has been established.
It's less that the US Empire has successfully overthrown 100% of legitimate attempts, and more that it has tried to overthrow every attempt and has succeeded in some cases and failed in others. Communists are not "morons" for supporting the success stories of socialism.
I absolutely was not calling Communists morons. I was calling Westerners who point at authoritarianism as 'an example of communism and why it's evil' morons.
As to the rest, we're all different, and though I support some attempts, I support no regimes that use harsh, unending authoritarianism as a pretext to utopian communism. In my view it spits in the face of what Marx stood for.
If you had read Marx and Engels, you'd know that they explicitly criticized Utopian socialism in favour of scientific socialism. Socialism is not supposed to be Utopian because utopias don't exist, it's supposed to be real, and hence unavoidably flawed.
Socialist countries do exist, and are alleged by liberals to be "authoritarian," but this is meaningless without acknowledging the class character of state authority. All states are "authoritarian," what differentiates them is which class is in control. In socialist states, that class is the proletariat, in capitalist states it's the capitalists. Communism is not utopian, it's scientific, and Marx railed against the utopian socialists like Robert Owen.
I think Marx would be more upset with those who refuse to support socialist states for being "too heavy-handed" with capitalists, landlords, fascists, etc, as he spoke this of the proletarian revolution:
Hence why all discussion of authority needs to be grounded primarily in class analysis to be Marxist.