Anarcho-capitalist Stalinism

Anarcho-Capitalist Stalinism is a political philosophy and ideology which mixes components and characteristics from the Austrian School of Economics and Anarcho-Capitalism together with the political ideology of Stalinism. Anarcho-capitalist Stalinism is mainly composed of a mixture of the economic and political ideas that have been originally created and compiled by the American philosopher and economist Murray Rothbard, and the ideological and political thought of Stalinism that had arisen in the Soviet Union during the time of Stalin. Its creation and defining have been originated from a group of political philosophers and economists in the 90s in post-Soviet Russia and in Latin America, who had decided to incorporate the two currents of Stalinism and Anarcho-Capitalism together in order to create a broader and more diverse political philosophy and ideology, being composed by a mixture of both the far ends of the spectrum.
Its inception had been conceived by a small number of Russian and Latin American economists and political philosophers. After the sudden Dissolution of the Soviet Union, many Russian academics were suddenly able to access a much broader amount of economic theories and ideologies. These academics had beeen attracted by many of these newly-accessible forms of economic thought, including the Austrian School of Economics and the political and economic thought of prominent Anarcho-Capitalists such as Murray Rothbard, David D. Friedman and Walter Block, along with other libertarian ideas of other notable Austrian economists such as Hans-Hermann Hoppe and Jesús Huerta de Soto. A few Russian and Latin American academics have incorporated these forms of economic thought while incorporating them into their own political ideology of Stalinism, together with pro-Soviet Union sentiments and other prominent Communist Theories.
 
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