Why Marxism is an irrational political belief

It’s insane to think that there are still Marxists out there, most of whom live comfortable lives in wealthy capitalist countries. Back in 2019, my colleague (and new friend!) Mike Huemer wrote:

“I’ve been known to cite Marxism as an example of an irrational political belief. This is controversial in intellectual circles (indeed, some will probably be outraged by this post), but that doesn’t prevent it from being clearly true; it just means that certain forms of irrationality are popular in intellectual circles. In fact, I regard Marxism as the paradigm of an irrational political belief; if it’s not irrational, nothing is. The theory has been as soundly refuted as a social theory can be. Sometimes, people ask me to explain why I say this.

Let me start with why I say it’s been soundly refuted.

a. Theoretical developments: Shortly after Marx wrote, his underlying economic theory was rejected by essentially the entire field and superseded by a better theory. Virtually no one who studies the subject (outside of oppressive Marxist regimes) believes the labor theory of value anymore. Without the labor theory of value, there’s no theory of surplus value, no theory of exploitation, and thus the central critique of capitalism fails. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, read any standard text on price theory. If you learn modern price theory, you are going to agree with it, and you are going to reject the labor theory as well. It’s that clear.

b. Historical developments: Marxism was tried many times. It was tried in many countries with different cultures, on every continent except Australia and Antarctica.

By different people, with different variations on the theory, at different times. Every time it went horribly wrong. Not just once or twice, and not just slightly wrong. In the best cases, it resulted in severe poverty and abuse of power. In the worst, it resulted in the greatest human atrocities in history. In total, between 100 and 150 million people were killed by their own, Marxist governments in the twentieth century. To be a Marxist, as far as I understand what that means, is to believe that, knowing all this, we should try again.

c. Predictability: In case you are tempted to say that Marx couldn’t have anticipated this: yes, he could. It’s hardly difficult to figure out that giving total power to the state might cause some problems — it’s not as if the history of government had been completely clean up til the 20th century, when suddenly, for the first time in history, people with power started to abuse it. Nor is this just some right-wing ideological point.

In witness: Mikhail Bakunin was a socialist anarchist who was a contemporary of Marx.

Very far to the left. He warned Marx about what was going to happen if Marxists took power — that the dictatorship of the proletariat would become the new class of exploiters and oppressors. This is the most obvious objection that should occur to anyone familiar with human beings, within a minute of hearing about Marx’s views.

Marx dismissed Bakunin’s warnings with a series of personal insults and dogmatic declarations. Actual quotations from Marx’s response to Bakunin: ‘Schoolboy drivel!’

‘The ass! This is democratic nonsense, political windbaggery!’ (The Marx-Engels Reader, 543-5) But what Bakunin predicted is essentially exactly what happened. I give this example to illustrate that even an extreme leftist could see the biggest problem, even back in the 19th century.

The second most obvious objection to communism is that people are not going to selflessly work for the good of society. That was hardly a new, unanticipatable discovery of the twentieth century. That, again, should be obvious to anyone familiar with human beings, if that person devotes any effort to thinking about what could go wrong. And if a person wants to radically remake society but does not devote any effort to thinking about what could go wrong, that person is irrational.

Bertrand Russell – himself a democratic socialist — had this to say of Marx: ‘My objections to Marx are of two sorts: one, that he was muddle-headed; and the other, that his thinking was almost entirely inspired by hatred.’ (http://www.rjgeib.com/thoughts/opiate/why.html) Russell visited Russia in 1920, just a few years after the Bolsheviks took over. Even at that early stage, he concluded that the experiment in communism was a failure. I give this example to illustrate, again, that one didn’t have to be a right-winger to see the problems with Marxism long ago.

Now if someone today, after all that we’ve seen, says, ‘We should give Marxism another try,’ I think that is not a possible rational response to the evidence. A rational person cannot think that.

Yet you can actually run into Marxists in the world l inhabit (the academic world), and they generally seem like normal people, even nice people, besides intelligent and educated – except for their being Marxists. I don’t know what is going on, except that politics deactivates people’s reasoning capacities.”

Hat tip: Nigel Ashford.

Disputing Irrational Beliefs (DIBS) | Northeast Wisconsin (N.E.W. ...
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Ludwig Wittgenstein: Philosophy in the Age of Airplanes

That is the title of a new book by Anthony Gottlieb on the life and ideas of the great but perplexing 20th-century philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein. (I found this 2025 book on the shelves of Shakespeare and Company, an English-language bookshop in Paris.) Among many other things, I have learned that the would-be philosopher had patented an idea for a new type of aircraft propeller in 1911 (see here, for example), when he just 21 years old! (p. 53) I will report back soon.

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Sunday song: La chanson d’amour

This was the first song I heard (and Shazamed) after arriving in Nice, France, last week!

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Scheall’s theorem and the pretense of power

Following up on my previous post, I want to explain the logic of Scott Scheall’s explanation of Elon Musk’s failed DOGE project, or what I like to call Scheall’s theorem, which can be summed up in three words: goals require knowledge. Or in Scheall’s words: “To deliberately realize goal G, policymakers must possess knowledge K. If policymakers lack knowledge K, they cannot deliberately realize goal G.” That is, in order to achieve some desired outcome or objective, a person or firm must have some level of know-how about what steps to take, and in what sequence, in order to accomplish his aims. Stated in formal terms, we can say that the probability that an actor A will achieve a given goal G is a function of A’s level of knowledge K. Or stated even more simply: K is a necessary, though not a sufficient, condition of G.

What is so beautiful about Scheall’s theorem is not just its simplicity but also its generality, for we can extend the logic of Scheall’s argument to the government. By way of illustration, we might want the government to accomplish some lofty goal, such as the eradication of poverty or the reduction of greenhouse gases or the elimination of wasteful spending, and the government, in turn, might have the power to issue orders towards those ends — what I like to call the “pretense of power” in honor of F. A. Hayek (see here or here, for example). But without sufficient knowledge about how to actually carry out its commands, it is highly unlikely that such goals, however well-intentioned, will actually be accomplished in a cost-effective or timely manner. Given Scheall’s theorem, the surprise is not that Elon Musk’s DOGE project failed; instead, the surprise for me is that it failed so quickly: DOGE was quietly shut down within eight months of its creation.

Magnet - F.A. Hayek Quote Curious Task of Economics Knowledge Insight Gift  3.5" | eBay
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In praise of Scott Scheall

Did you know that Elon Musk’s “DOGE” project — the misnamed Department of Government Efficiency — ended up costing the government four times more money that it saved? My favorite talk, by far, at this year’s joint meeting of the North American and European economic history societies was “Liberalism’s ouroboros: DOGE and the transition problem in stark relief” by my colleague and friend Scott Scheall (University of Austin). Among other things, Scheall explained why DOGE was such a spectacular failure. (I will summarize the logic of his argument in the next day or two. In the meantime, here is a podcast featuring Professor Scheall.)

DOGE” IS OFFICIALLY DONE — and after claiming to have slashed ...
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Côte d’Azur update

I will be presenting two co-authored works on Adam Smith today (28 May) and tomorrow Friday (29 May) at the first-ever joint meeting of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought and the History of Economics Society, which is taking place at the Campus Saint-Jean d’Angély of the Université Côte d’Azur. Today’s talk is based on a chapter from my forthcoming book with Salim Rashid (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign), Beyond Das Adam Smith Problem (“Chapter 11: Counterfactual conundrums”), while tomorrow’s talk is on a work-in-progress I am researching and writing with Alain Alcouffe (University of Toulouse) about Adam Smith’s visit to Geneva during his grand tour years (“Adam Smith’s Encounters in Geneva: 1765-1766”).

Lær af Adam Smith | Information
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Greetings from Nice, France! This afternoon (Wednesday, 27 May), I will be joining an academic panel on “Law, Organizations, and Institutions“, where I will be presenting my paper “Coase’s fable” and commenting on a paper by Edward Nik-Khah (Roanoke College): “How markets became organizations: the entangled history of two concepts.”

Next week, a sizable fraction of all historians of economics ...
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Hayek in Nice, France

Today (Tuesday, 26 May), I will be attending three talks on F. A. Hayek at seize heures (16:00) Nice time: Hayek on economic development by Bruce Caldwell (Duke); Hayek at Freiburg: drifting away from ordoliberalism by Hansjörg Klausinger (WU Vienna); and Hayek’s twofold contribution to law and economics by Daniel Nientiedt (Walter Eucken Institut).

The Worst on Top: A Biography of Friedrich Hayek | Libertarianism.org
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Monday (AI-generated?) music: Daydreaming

How can we differentiate AI-music or AI-poetry or AI-whatever from human-made songs, poems, etc.? On this note, I have been debating with myself whether to share this mellow music, which might be AI-generated (see here, for example) and which popped into my YouTube feed in May of 2025. Is it AI? And if so, is it art or just slop?

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Nissa la Bella

As I mentioned in a recent post (see here), I will be in the coastal city of Nice in the south of France until the end of May. In the meantime, I want to shout out my fellow blogger and Francophile Sheree for pointing out the many Art Deco landmarks in Nice as well as for recommending a number of additional sights in Nice, all of which I hope to visit during my free time in “Nissa la Bella.” Merci, Sheree! For reference, I have assembled some of Sheree’s most informative Niçois blog posts below:

  1. Basilique Notre-Dame de l’Assomption, Avenue Jean Médecin
  2. Gloria Mansions, 123–125 rue de France
  3. La Pergola, 36 rue Verdi (corner of rue Guiglia)
  4. Palais Galatée, corner of rue Trachel and rue de Dijon
  5. Plaza hotel, Anantara Plaza
  6. Opera Nice Côte d’Azur, 4-6 rue Saint-François de Paule
  7. Villa Collin d’Huovila, 139 Promenade des Anglais
  8. Bonus link: Wines of Nice
Nice Old Town Map - Ontheworldmap.com
File:Hôtel de Nice 010.jpg - Wikimedia Commons
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