Frases de Vladimír Iljič Lenin

Vladimir Ilitch Lenin ou Lenine foi um revolucionário e chefe de Estado russo, responsável em grande parte pela execução da Revolução Russa de 1917, líder do Partido Comunista, e primeiro presidente do Conselho dos Comissários do Povo da União Soviética. Influenciou teoricamente os partidos comunistas de todo o mundo, e suas contribuições resultaram na criação de uma corrente teórica denominada leninismo . Diversos pensadores e estudiosos escreveram sobre a sua importância para a história recente e o desenvolvimento da Rússia, entre eles o historiador Eric Hobsbawm, para quem Lenin teria sido "o personagem mais influente do século XX ".

✵ 10. Abril 1870 – 21. Janeiro 1924   •   Outros nomes Wladimir Iljitsch Lenin
Vladimír Iljič Lenin photo
Vladimír Iljič Lenin: 354   citações 30   Curtidas

Vladimír Iljič Lenin Frases famosas

“Os capitalistas chamam 'liberdade' a dos ricos de enriquecer e a dos operários para morrer de fome. Os capitalistas chamam liberdade de imprensa a compra dela pelos ricos, servindo-se da riqueza para fabricar e falsificar a opinião pública.”

The capitalists have always used the term "freedom" to mean freedom for the rich to get richer and for the workers to starve to death. In capitalist usage, freedom of the press means freedom of the rich to bribe the press, freedom to use their wealth to shape and fabricate so-called public opinion.
Democracy and Revolution - Página 139 http://books.google.com.br/books?id=es6FDrcQymUC&pg=PA139, Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin - Resistance Books, 2000, ISBN 1876646004, 9781876646004 - 222 páginas

Vladimír Iljič Lenin frases e citações

Esta tradução está aguardando revisão. Está correcto?
Esta tradução está aguardando revisão. Está correcto?
Esta tradução está aguardando revisão. Está correcto?

Vladimír Iljič Lenin: Frases em inglês

“One man with a gun can control 100 without one.”

Not found in Lenin's Collected Works. Began to surface on the internet in the mid-1990s.
Misattributed
Variante: One man with a gun can control a hundred without one.

“In capitalist society, providing it develops under the most favorable conditions, we have a more or less complete democracy in the democratic republic. But this democracy is always hemmed in by the narrow limits set by capitalist exploitation and consequently always remains, in effect, a democracy for the minority, only for the propertied classes, only for the rich. Freedom in capitalist society always remains about the same as it was in the ancient Greek republics: freedom for the slaveowners. Owing to the conditions of capitalist exploitation, the modern wage slaves are so crushed by want and poverty that “they cannot be bothered with democracy,” “cannot be bothered with politics”; in the ordinary, peaceful course of events, the majority of the population is debarred from participation in public and political life. The”

Fonte: The State and Revolution (1917), Ch. 5
Contexto: Democracy for an insignificant minority, democracy for the rich – that is the democracy of capitalist society. If we look more closely into the machinery of capitalist democracy, we see everywhere, in the "petty" – supposedly petty – details of the suffrage (residential qualifications, exclusion of women, etc.), in the technique of the representative institutions, in the actual obstacles to the right of assembly (public buildings are not for "paupers"!), in the purely capitalist organization of the daily press, etc., etc., – we see restriction after restriction upon democracy. These restrictions, exceptions, exclusions, obstacles for the poor seem slight, especially in the eyes of one who has never known want himself and has never been in close contact with the oppressed classes in their mass life (and nine out of 10, if not 99 out of 100, bourgeois publicists and politicians come under this category); but in their sum total these restrictions exclude and squeeze out the poor from politics, from active participation in democracy.

“The bourgeoisie are today evading taxation by bribery and through their connections; we must close all loopholes.”

Collected Works, Vol. 27, pp. 383–387.
Collected Works
Fonte: Revolution!: Sayings of Vladimir Lenin

“Federal Switzerlandization would be a huge step backwards for Germany. Two”

Vladimir Lenin livro The State and Revolution

Fonte: The State and Revolution

“Thus, in one way or another, the whole world is more or less the debtor to and vassal of these forn international banker countries, the four "pillars" of world finance capital.”

Fonte: Imperialism, The Highest Stage of Capitalism (1917), Chapter Three
Fonte: Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism: Full Text of 1916 Edition

“There are decades when weeks happen, and weeks when decades happen.”

or: There are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen.
Always without citation but supposedly describing the Russian Revolution; earliest quotes online dating ~2005-2006 "Exposing the Big Lie: Interview with George Galloway by Eric Ruder" http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Europe/ExposingBigLie_GGalloway.html
"Johann Hari: Why won't Israel just exchange prisoners? This is such a wacky, left-wing ideal that it was pursued by Ariel Sharon two years ago" http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/commentators/johann-hari/johann-hari-why-wont-israel-just-exchange-prisoners-6094888.html, 19 July 2006; popularized describing the Arab Spring. May be loosely based on a similar phrasing by Karl Marx:
How soon the English workers will throw off what seems to be a bourgeois contagion remains to be seen. So far as the main theses in your book [Condition of the Working Class in England] are concerned, by the by, they have been corroborated down to the very last detail by developments subsequent to 1844. For I have again been comparing the book with the notes I made on the ensuing period. Only your small-minded German philistine who measures world history by the ell and by what he happens to think are ‘interesting news items’, could regard 20 years as more than a day where major developments of this kind are concerned, though these may be again succeeded by days into which 20 years are compressed.
Letter, Marx to Engels, 9 April 1863 in Marx and Engels, Selected Correspondence 1965, 140 http://marxists.catbull.com/archive/marx/works/1863/letters/63_04_09.htm
Misattributed

Vladimir Lenin citar: “It is more pleasant and useful to go through the 'experience of the revolution' than to write about it.”

“We will hang the capitalists with the rope that they sell us.”

According to the book, "They Never Said It", p. 64, there is no evidence Lenin ever said this. Lenin was supposed to have made his observation to one of his close associates, Grigori Zinoviev, not long after a meeting of the Politburo in the early 1920s, but there is no evidence that he ever did. Experts on the Soviet Union reject the rope quote as spurious.
Misattributed

“An oppressed class which does not strive to learn to use arms, to acquire arms, only deserves to be treated like slaves. We cannot, unless we have become bourgeois pacifists or opportunists, forget that we are living in a class society from which there is no way out, nor can there be, save through the class struggle. In every class society, whether based on slavery, serfdom, or, as at present, wage-labor, the oppressor class is always armed. Not only the modern standing army, but even the modern militia - and even in the most democratic bourgeois republics, Switzerland, for instance - represent the bourgeoisie armed against the proletariat. That is such an elementary truth that it is hardly necessary to dwell upon it. Suffice it to point to the use of troops against strikers in all capitalist countries.
A bourgeoisie armed against the proletariat is one of the biggest fundamental and cardinal facts of modern capitalist society. And in face of this fact, revolutionary Social-Democrats are urged to “demand” “disarmament”! That is tantamount of complete abandonment of the class-struggle point of view, to renunciation of all thought of revolution. Our slogan must be: arming of the proletariat to defeat, expropriate and disarm the bourgeoisie. These are the only tactics possible for a revolutionary class, tactics that follow logically from, and are dictated by, the whole objective development of capitalist militarism. Only after the proletariat has disarmed the bourgeoisie will it be able, without betraying its world-historic mission, to consign all armaments to the scrap-heap. And the proletariat will undoubtedly do this, but only when this condition has been fulfilled, certainly not before.”

Fonte: The Military Programme of the Proletarian Revolution

Autores parecidos

Josef Stalin photo
Josef Stalin 22
secretário geral do Partido Comunista da União Soviética
Leon Trotsky photo
Leon Trotsky 14
marxista revolucionário russo
Nelson Mandela photo
Nelson Mandela 47
político e ativista sul-africano, Ex-presidente da África d…
Margaret Thatcher photo
Margaret Thatcher 28
política britânica
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn photo
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 5
romancista, dramaturgo e historiador russo
Ronald Reagan photo
Ronald Reagan 21
político estadunidense, 40° Presidente dos Estados Unidos
Eva Perón photo
Eva Perón 2
Ex-primeira-dama da Argentina