Monday, March 4, 2019

What Motive Explains this Coalition of Capitalists and Bolsheviks? A Planned Socialist Government as a Globalization of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the Federal Trade Commission

What motive explains this coalition of capitalists and Bolsheviks?

Russia was then--as is today--the largest untapped market in the world. Moreover, Russia, then and now, constituted the greatest potential competitive threat to American industrial and financial supremacy. (A glance at a world map is sufficient to spotlight the geographical difference between the vast land mass of Russia and the smaller United States.) Wall Street must have cold shivers when it visualizes Russia as a second super American industrial giant.

But why allow Russia to become a competitor and a challenge to U.S. supremacy? In the late nineteenth century, Morgan, Rockefeller, and Guggenheim had demonstrated their monopolistic proclivities. In Railroads and Regulation 1877-1916 Gabriel Kolko has demonstrated how the railroad owners, not the farmers, wanted state control of railroads in order to preserve their monopoly and abolish competition. So the simplest explanation of our evidence is that a syndicate of Wall Street financiers enlarged their monopoly ambitions and broadened horizons on a global scale. The gigantic Russian market was to be converted into a captive market and a technical colony to be exploited by a few high-powered American financiers and the corporations under their control. What the Interstate Commerce Commission and the Federal Trade Commission under the thumb of American industry could achieve for that industry at home, a planned socialist government could achieve for it abroad--given suitable support and inducements from Wall Street and Washington, D.C.

--Antony C. Sutton, Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution (Forest Row, UK: Clairview Books, 2011), 172-173.


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