Volkovism



Volkovism is communist theory developed by Pasha Volkov and implemented in the United Provinces of Rovsnoska and Zaporizhia that included rapid, an eternal dictatorship of the proletariat, collectivization of agriculture, "communist idolism", and an emphasis on the constant preparation for war or "the people's war". First rejected by contemporary Vojiskiy communists, it eventually took strong hold within Zaporizhian and Eastern Rovsnoski communists. During the late 1910s popular Zaporizhian communist figure Vladimir Kurchatov adopted and spread Volkovism, and during the Vojiskiy War it was the official ideology of the Rovski-Zaporizhian Revolutionary Army, and later the UPRZ.

In 1939 when Andre Marchotov came to power Volovism was shifted to promoted the escalation of utilizing state violence to forcibly purge society of the bourgeoisie, whom Marchotov regarded as threats to the pursuit of the communist revolution. This policy resulted in substantial political violence and persecution of such people. "Enemies" included not only bourgeois people, but also working-class people with counter-revolutionary sympathies and members of of other various communist sects. This drastically changed relations with Teutonia, of which relations were already strained due to Volkovists "idolism."

Eternal Dictatorship of the Proletariat
Volkov believed that the dictatorship of the proletariat did not simply function as a means to transition to a communist economy, but as a way to continue the revolution. The dictator would be above the vanguard, but himself must be a class-conscious member of the vanguard.