Leninism
Leninism is called "imperialism and Marxism in the proletarian revolutionary era." It was first named by Stalin, Lenin's thought system formed in the early twentieth century, and within the socialist camp that Leninism was a revision and supplement to the basic theory of Marxism on the basis of Russian practice. The greatest feature of Leninism compared to other schools of Marxism is its theory of "dictatorship of the proletariat". At the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, the international communist movement had a major disagreement on the question of "how to obtain power" and "how the proletarian regime governs the state". The faction, represented by Kautsky, argues that the proletarian party should be committed to a legitimate struggle and that it can retain its democratic system after it has gained power. Lenin as the representative of another school that the proletarian political parties to seek a legitimate struggle to make its revisionism, the proletariat can only get through the means of violent revolution, and in the regime, the bourgeois democratic system should not be retained, But the dictatorship of the proletariat should be implemented. After the proletariat gains power, even if a bourgeoisie of a country does not exist, it is still necessary to take a dictatorship to defend the proletarian regime. ...