Why did Karl Marx believe the Irish were not ready for “worker socialism”?

a) He claimed that the rural Irish were not advanced enough for a workers’ revolution.
b) Sales of his works in Ireland were slow, so few Irish even knew what the term meant.
Consider This: How industrial was Ireland compared with Britain? See 9.3.1: Workers, Unite!
c) Unlike in England, the Irish and their landlords had excellent relationships.
Consider This: How industrial was Ireland compared with Britain? See 9.3.1: Workers, Unite!
d) The Catholic Irish were too religious to become revolutionaries.
Consider This: How industrial was Ireland compared with Britain? See 9.3.1: Workers, Unite!


a) He claimed that the rural Irish were not advanced enough for a workers’ revolution.

History

You might also like to view...

Why did the elections of 1856 and 1860 not only fail to resolve the sectional crisis over slavery, but actually make it worse?

What will be an ideal response?

History

Federal assumption of the state debts would funnel money out of all of the following sections of the country except

a. the southern states. b. the middle states. c. the northeastern states. d. the western states. e. Canada.

History

Coolidge supported the ______________________ as a way to reduce U.S. military commitments abroad and shrink the size of the federal government

Fill in the blank(s) with correct word

History

Arrange the following events in chronological order: (A) fall of France, (B) Atlantic Conference, and (C) Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union

a. B, A, C b. A, B, C c. C, B, A d. A, C, B e. C, A, B

History