Zionists are outside "the group" therefore all bets are off in opposing them.
In early 1907, Vladimir Lenin published accusations that some Menshevik organizations were “selling seats in the Second Duma to the Cadets” (Constitutional Democrats). In other words, he accused the Mensheviks of colluding with a liberal bourgeois party rather than letting workers’ candidates run. The Mensheviks filed a formal complaint, prompting Lenin to face slander charges before a Party Court (Control Commission). The trial took place just before the opening of the Fifth (London) Congress of the Russian Communists (Russian Social-Democratic Workers’ Party, RSDWP), and Lenin delivered a lengthy oral defense.
In his defense speech, Lenin clearly delineated the boundaries of permissible and non-permissible behavior during the communists’ political debates. He maintained that polemics inside a party must remain within certain bounds — personal insults, “poisoned weapons,” and exaggerations are undesirable because they harm party unity.
However, for polemics against a political enemy (or former party members who break away from the party), these limits no longer apply. There are no formal “party rules” constraining communists in such discussions. Lenin says, “Such wording is calculated not to convince, but to break up the ranks of the opponent, not to correct the mistake of the opponent, but to destroy him, to wipe his organization off the face of the earth” (Lenin [1907], 1977, p. 425).
In other words, while debating a political enemy, communists do not seek to uncover the truth. Lenin proposed that communists must conduct polemics that are not designed to affect or convince their opponents. That is simply because the communists strive to destroy the opposition. Truth be told, the communists’ polemics are aimed not at their opponents, but at a larger audience. Lenin advocates for “destroying the enemy organization, by rousing among the masses hatred, aversion, and contempt for this organization” (p. 428). Thus, communists are expected to provoke disgust in the audience toward their opponents, potentially even before the public fully understands the communists’ arguments.
Finally, Lenin discussed the hypothetical case of the Bund (Jewish non-Zionist socialists of the Russian Empire) seceding from the RSDWP. He states, “Could anyone then seriously raise the question of the impermissibility of pamphlets calculated to instill in the Bundist working masses hatred, aversion and contempt for their leaders, and describing these leaders as bourgeois in disguise, as those who had sold themselves to the Jewish bourgeoisie and were trying to get their men into the Duma with the latter’s assistance, etc.?” (p. 429). The conclusion is that Jews (or any other Party subset) must be treated with the utmost respect if they follow the Party line. However, once they are out, all bets are off.
This line of thought is the logical continuation of the left’s worldview, adapted for “civilized” political debate. In fact, Lenin proposed the principle of asymmetric tolerance and asymmetric civility: Tolerance (and debate norms) applied only within a defined “community of the correct line.” Outside this defined community, polemics become a tool for political annihilation rather than physical destruction. In ten years, however, when the Bolsheviks came to power in Russia, intolerance also entered the physical domain. Basically, Lenin’s instrumental view prioritizes revolutionary efficacy over universal decorum.
There are notable conceptual parallels (rooted in the broader Marxist-Leninist tradition) between Vladimir Lenin’s approach and Herbert Marcuse’s essay, “Repressive Tolerance” (1965). Both thinkers advocate for the selective application of liberal and democratic principles to advance revolutionary goals. Both justify intolerance or harsh rhetoric toward perceived enemies of “liberation.” This shared logic reflects a commitment to vanguardism, where an enlightened minority guides (or suppresses) the masses against “reactionary” forces.
Marcuse was explicit that such actions might involve suppressing speech that sustains “reactionary” power structures, creating space for “progressive” change. Marcuse insisted on the “withdrawal of tolerance before the deed, at the stage of communication in word, print, and picture. Such extreme suspension of the right of free speech and free assembly is indeed justified only if the whole of society is in extreme danger. I maintain that our society is in such an emergency situation, and that it has become the normal state of affairs” (Marcuse 1965, pp. 109–110).
There are several key features of the Lenin-Marcuse approach that led directly to cancel culture, Jewish persecution, and double-standards applied uniquely to Israel. First, the selective application of norms for “Us vs. Them.” Second, vanguard elitism. Thirdly, they provide a rationale for suppressing opposition. These features stem from a common Marxist heritage, but Marcuse — a critical theorist from the Frankfurt School — adapts them to the post–World War II West.
As a result, Lenin and Marcuse created a framework in which the modern dialogue about Jews and Israel — particularly on the left — became highly asymmetrical, moralizing, and often exclusionary.
When the Soviet Union turned against Zionism after 1948 (especially after 1967), this Leninist model shaped the entire discourse. Zionism was redefined as a hostile ideology, equated with racism, imperialism, and colonialism, and therefore outside the bounds of permissible debate. Soviet media, academia, and propaganda were mobilized not to argue with Zionists, but to discredit and delegitimize Zionism entirely — an “exterminative polemic” in Lenin’s sense.
That shaped the official language: Zionism was portrayed as an “aggressive racist ideology,” not a legitimate nationalistic movement of Jews. Jewish voices who dissented inside the Soviet Union were treated not as dialogue partners, but as traitors or agents of imperialism. In other words, Lenin’s asymmetric rule for polemics provided the intellectual permission structure for non-dialogue, for campaigns aimed at destroying the very legitimacy of the opposing view. That is why, to this day, the left demonizes Zionists and humanizes anti-Zionists. The international left makes sure that every Israeli victory is a defeat.
Israel is increasingly classified as an oppressor — a “settler-colonial state” and an “apartheid regime.” Therefore, speech defending Israel is treated as harmful, reactionary, and illegitimate — not simply wrong, but dangerous. The result: deplatforming campaigns, boycott movements, and a rhetorical climate in which Zionist perspectives are considered outside the boundaries of acceptable discourse. It comes off as a modern echo of Marcuse’s call for “intolerance toward movements from the right.” It is classic Marcusean logic: tolerance is conditional on emancipatory potential, not on neutral procedural fairness.
Together, Lenin’s polemical ruthlessness and Marcuse’s selective tolerance create a potent framework for anti-Jewish and anti-Israel rhetoric. If the former supplies the aggressive language (e.g., “Zionist genocide” as an unquestionable truth), the latter justifies silencing counterarguments as “repressive.” This hybrid profoundly shaped leftist movements from the 1970s onward, evident in Europe’s radical left (where anti-Zionism spills into antisemitism) and U.S. campuses, where BDS campaigns invoke Marcusean intolerance to delegitimize Israel.
In today’s polarized debates — post–October 7, 2023 — these ideas underpin calls to deplatform Zionists, blending revolutionary zeal with cultural gatekeeping, often at the expense of a nuanced dialogue on Jewish self-determination. This Lenin-Marcuse approach entrenches itself in leftist echo chambers, where Lenin’s “extermination” of dissent meets Marcuse’s “liberating” suppression.
References
Lenin, V. ([1907] 1977). Speech for the Defence (or for the Prosecution of the Menshevik Section of the Central Committee) Delivered At the Party Tribunal. In Collected Works (4th ed., Vol. 12, pp. 421-432). Moscow: Progress Publishers.
Marcuse, H. (1965). Repressive Tolerance. In B. M. Robert Paul Wolff, A Critique of Pure Tolerance. Boston: Beacon Press.1:23 PM 3/18/2026
Of course Zionists, Christian and other, also use these same tactics against Free-Thinkers like Candace Owens, Tucker Carlson, Megan Kelly, Glenn Greenwald, et al. They parochially treat their ideas as Anti-Semitic (and not Universal) and therefore dangerous and, much like the Academic and Campus Left, de-platform freethinking speakers whenever possible.

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