Every so often—usually from people who should know better, and occasionally from people who definitely do—someone confidently declares that the family is “inherently communist.” Ben Shapiro has repeated it. Countless left‑leaning commentators repeat it with a knowing smirk. And Marxists, of course, treat it as a kind of anthropological mic‑drop: See? You’re already communists. You just don’t realise it yet.
The argument goes like this: In the traditional nuclear family, the father provides “according to his ability,” the mother and children receive “according to their needs,” and the household distributes resources without markets, prices, or contracts. Voilà—communism in miniature. All we need to do is scale the family up to the size of society, and the communist utopia emerges like a butterfly from its bourgeois chrysalis.
It’s a seductive idea. It’s also nonsense.
It’s a seductive idea. It’s also nonsense.
The Marxist Anthropological Trick
Marx believed that humans are naturally communist but trapped in “false consciousness.” If only we could shed the illusions imposed by capitalism, we would return to our true, communal nature. So, when Marxists point to the family as “proof,” they think they’ve found the Rosetta Stone of human nature.
But this is sleight‑of‑hand. It works only if you ignore everything about how families actually function.
The Traditional Family Was Not an Egalitarian Commune
The traditional nuclear family, before its recent ideological disassembly, was not a flat, egalitarian collective. It was a hierarchical institution with defined roles, asymmetric responsibilities, and clear lines of authority.
Let’s lay it out plainly:
1. The father provided, but he also governed.
Until about five minutes ago in historical time, the father was head of the household. He made the major decisions. He bore legal responsibility for the family’s welfare. His authority was not symbolic; it was structural.
2. The mother was the primary caregiver, but also the primary disciplinarian.
She wasn’t a passive recipient of redistributed goods. She exercised authority over children, managed the household economy, and enforced norms. Her role was different from the father’s, but not subordinate in the Marxist sense of “oppressed class.”
3. Children were not equal members of a commune.
They were subordinate. They obeyed. They were trained, corrected, and socialised. They did chores. They had duties. They were not “co‑owners of the means of production”; they were apprentices in civilisation.
4. Birth order mattered.
The eldest often had more responsibility. Younger siblings had different expectations. This is not communism; it’s hierarchy layered on hierarchy.
In other words: The family is not a commune. It is a micro‑civilisation.
Why Marxists Need the Family to Be Communist
Marxism has always struggled with human nature. People stubbornly refuse to behave like the blank‑slate, selfless co-operators the theory requires. So, Marxists must either:
- Change human nature (the 20th‑century solution), or
- Deny human nature (the 21st‑century solution).
It’s a rhetorical trick, not an anthropological insight.
The Ants-and-Bees Fallacy
This isn’t the first-time collectivists have tried to justify their ideology by pointing to nature. Early socialists compared humans to ants and honeybees—species that live in highly coordinated, self‑sacrificing colonies.
But ants and bees achieve this through:
- genetic uniformity
- rigid caste systems
- instinctive behaviour
- reproductive suppression
- total subordination of the individual to the hive
Humans are not eusocial insects. We are cooperative, yes—but also hierarchical, competitive, innovative, and individually motivated. The family reflects this complexity. It is not a commune; it is a structured, role‑based institution designed to raise children into functioning adults.
Scaling the Family Is Impossible
Even if the family were communistic (it isn’t), scaling it to society would still be impossible. Families work because:
- they are small
- they are bound by kinship
- they operate on trust
- they rely on deep emotional bonds
- they have natural authority structures
The family works because it is not a political system. It is a biological, cultural, and moral institution.
The Real Lesson
The family is not proof that humans are “secret communists.” It is proof that humans thrive in structured, hierarchical, cooperative units—units that balance authority with care, responsibility with affection, and duty with love.
Marxism flattens all this into a cartoon. It sees equality where there is hierarchy, collectivism where there is kinship, and ideology where there is biology.
The family is not communism in miniature. It is civilisation in miniature.
And that is precisely why Marxists have spent a century trying to dismantle it.
Colinxy regularly blogs at No Minister, This article was sourced HERE

9 comments:
Marxism is an idea created and (in NZ) perpetuated by ivory tower academics and public servants, the media and judges who want to control other people's lives. Unfortunately these are the people that control NZ.
This is the worst argument I have so far ever heard to support communism / Marxism.
In an average family, the parents usually do not try to murder, suppress, terrorize or control their children as they grow into independent adults.
Quite the strong contrast to every Uncle H, Chairman M or Aunty J.
I sympathise with Anon 904. However, not only Marxist governments "murder, suppress, terrorize [and] control" their people. These are the hallmarks of all totalitarian states whatever the ideological hue.
Google defines communism as "a political and economic ideology aiming for a classless, stateless society based on common ownership of the means of production, distribution, and exchange." This necessarily invokes society as a whole, and has no applicability to the family unit.
It would also pay commentators such as Anon 325 to bear in mind that classical Marxism is long kaput. What academics etc promote is neo-Marxism which is a different kettle of fish. Its guru was Antonio Gramsci.
This article is in accord with an evolutionary perspective which holds that for humans the purpose of life is to have and to raise children until they are of an age where they can in turn reproduce. That is what a family is about.
For a community, altruism can also be adaptive, but it is not the only or primary reason for replication of adaptive variations as sexual reproduction is in a family.
We ought to be giving thought to the role of the family in our present society.
Dear B.V. Your comment is duly noted, but please keep in mind here in NZ we do not understand nor have been taught, on the subject of Communism (unless you have some lecture[s] via an Academic study) nor are many NZder's likely to read -
- Marx, Lenin, Engels
- anything regarding the Russian Revolution 1917 >
- what Stalin was "really" like
- what was the purpose of the "collective Farm"
- or what "Communism actually did to the populations (my example is Africa and the despotic leaders who were 'inspired' by the doctrine of the Russian Revolution - namely mass murder - which Russian leaders enacted on their own people) - but will base their definition on said subject via print media - who we all know do not get the stories correct.
Would it be fair to state - 'that NZder's should look at Cuba from Castro to now' to gain an understanding of what Socialist/Communist, thinking & ideology has done to that Country?
It would be interesting to gain a Kiwi perspective on Cuba.
To Anon 11.43: NZ got a master class from Ardern ( former president of the Int. Socialist Youth - a training ground for communists). Lessons: tax massively, bribe/buy voters, govern incompetently, leave devastating debt - but, acquire personal wealth and global adulation. Many gullible NZers missed this Oscar- winning fiasco - while too many others have copied her example!
B.V - your response @ 1.49 PM - "Touche".
Good sir, you need to review the Robt Muldoon years - 1981 and the Spring Bok tour of NZ.
If you think Ardern "pulled the wool" - so did Muldoon - who against (reportedly) advice - of no tour - instructed the tour to proceed - and some in our then "esteemed" MSM learnt that it was being used " as a tactic to deflect from economical issues of the day".
I wonder what Fidel Castro "would have made of that"??
Hi Barend,
Thanks for pointing out on the difference between "classical" and "neo" Marxism.
But either way it doesn't really matter from where these "angel" academics or "gurus" appear.
None have ever proven to be trustworthy in over a century (neo or classical) to lead or guide a society to some magical utopia.
Any "common ownership" or "redistribution of wealth" has never gone fairly.
I certainly wouldn't trust you to run my affairs and decide my share - unless you first let me do that for you?
Anon 222, in a free society people run their own affairs except for a few unfortunates who can't, in which case the State has to step in. We wouldn't want a system in which someone with power over us runs our affairs. I think we're pretty much on the same wavelength.
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