Wiki is in the process of importing stuff Please be patient Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.Anti-spam check. Do not fill this in!==Variants== ===[[File:ChristLeft.png]] Christian Left=== WIP ===[[File:Christcom.png]] Christian Communism=== Christian Communism is an ideology mixing [[File:Christy.png]] [[Christian Theocracy|Christianity]] with [[File:Commie.png]] [[Communism (Disambiguation)|communism]]. As a theological view, it states that teachings of [[File:Jesus.png]] Jesus are compatible with Marxist theory. Historians generally agree that in first Christian communities there existed a common ownership of property. That is confirmed by the Bible. Yet, its important to notice that said communities were much older than [[File:Karl_Marx.png]] [[Marxism]] and lacked concept of class struggle. Some see Thomas More's "Utopia" to be an example of Christian Communism, as it describes ideal society as being administrated through application of reason and based on common ownership of property. Many communists, including [[File:Centmarxf.png]] [[Classical Social Democracy|Karl Kautsky]], argued that Bible teaches communism and apostles practiced it. Famous theorists of Christian Communism in Western Europe include: Étienne Cabet, Eugene Debs, Wilhelm Weitling and Pehr Götrek. Weitling was leader of League of the Just while Götrek was famous for translating ''The Communist Manifesto into'' Swedish''.'' In his translation, he have changed "Workers of the world, unite!" into "Folkets röst, guds röst!''"'' meaning "People's voice is God's voice". In 20th century, Christian Communists became part of wider communist movement - but were marginalized later and Christianity was generally persecuted by newly-created revolutionary government. However, it slightly changed after Second World War as Christian Communists took part in few [[File:Antifa.png]] [[Anti-Fascism|anti-fascist]] movements - orthodox priest [[File:Christcom.png]] Vlada Zečević was member of [[File:LCY.png]] [[Titoism|League of Communists of Yugoslavia]] and [[File:Cball-Yugoslavia.png]] [https://www.polandballwiki.com/wiki/Yugoslaviaball#Relationships_(%D0%9E%D0%B4%D0%BD%D0%BE%D1%81%D0%B8/Odnosi) the Yugoslav Partisans], [[File:Groza.png]] Petru Groza was Prime Minister of [[File:Cball-SRRomania.png]] [https://www.polandballwiki.com/wiki/SR_Romaniaball communist Romania]. In [[File:Cball-Poland-old.png]] [https://www.polandballwiki.com/wiki/PR_Polandball People's Republic of Poland], there existed few pro-government, Catholic organisations, such as: PAX Association, "Znak" and few more.[[File:Castro.png]] [[National Communism|Fidel Castro]] saw Christianity as fully compatible with communism, stating that "Christ chose the fishermen because he was a communist." and that there is "great coincidence between Christianity's objectives and the ones we Communists seek, between the Christian teachings of humility, austerity, selflessness, and loving thy neighbour and what we might call the content of a revolutionary's life and behaviour." Today, leader of CPRF party, [[File:Zyu.png]] [[Conservative Socialism|Gennady Zyuganov]] sees Christ as first communist and states that Bible can be read through a socialist perspective. ===German Peasants' War=== The German Peasant War was a large-scale peasant uprising that broke out in 1524. At the beginning, it was a local peasant uprising and later extended to most of the southern regions (southern Germany, Austria and Switzerland). The peasants raised clear requirements for the first time by proposing the Twelve Clauses Uprising. In 1525, the uprising was suppressed in Schwaben, Franken, Alsace and Turingen. The 1526 uprising was extinguished in Saxony and Tyrol. Similar uprisings had broken out in Britain and Switzerland before the peasant uprising broke out. ===[[file:MLK Jr.png]] Martin Luther Kingism=== MLKism is the ideology of African-American civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr. He is considered by many to be the leading figure of the Black Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 60s in the United States, being most known for his guiding principles of civil disobedience and nonviolence in resisting injustice. He was deeply religious, having been a Baptist minister for a majority of his adult life, and citing the Bible frequently in his speeches on racial equality. He was also, to quote himself, "more socialistic in [his] economic theory than capitalistic. And yet [he is] not so opposed to capitalism that [he has] failed to see its relative merits. ===[[File:Münster rebellion.png]] Münster Rebellion [[File:Munster2.png]]=== The [[File:Münster rebellion.png]] Münster Rebellion took place after the German Peasants' War, in which they attempted an [[File:ProtTheo.png]] [[Protestant Theocracy|Anabaptist Christian Theocracy]] between 1532 (in fact 1534) and 1535 in the [[File:Cball-HRE.png]]Holy Roman Empire. The foundations of the community believed that the Bible claimed [[File:Communalist.png]] [[Communalism|absolute equality]] and distribution of all goods. In [[File:Münster rebellion.png]] Münster, several men were soon baptized and others were apparently rebaptized with the support of Bernhard Rothmann. The rebellion ended in 1535, after being taken over by the besiegers of the [[File:Cball-HRE.png]] Holy Roman Empire, in which all the leaders were tortured and executed and their bodies exposed in public in cages. Summary: Please note that all contributions to Polcompball Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here. You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see pcb w:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission! Cancel Editing help (opens in new window) This page is a member of a hidden category: Category:Pages with broken file links