Lenin preached Marxism, which called for the overthrow of the capitalist society in place of a socialist one where the workers in the factories not the owners of the factories would be in charge. If this were to happen all owners would lose their property and all government officials would likely lose their jobs. Even some members of the working class did not trust the people who followed Lenin's beliefs, because they saw the possibility for the country to be taken over by socialists and change everything politically and economically that they had been used to and even preferred.
Lenin believed in worldwide communist revolution and created the Communist International to go into other countries to agitate for a socialist government. Once Lenin was in power, capitalist countries feared that he and his followers would come into their countries and stir up revolutions just like he had done in Russia.
they fear the comunism
They feared the spread of Communism
It caused a fear of foreign influence in the United States.
It caused a fear of foreign influence in the United States.
Americans feared the communist party during the Cold War because of its association with the Soviet Union, the main rival of the United States. The fear of communism stemmed from the belief that it threatened American values, democracy, and capitalism. The Red Scare, triggered by events like the Russian Revolution and the spread of communism in Eastern Europe, further heightened fears of communist infiltration and espionage in the United States.
The effects on the internment of Japanese-Americans was negative psychologically. Shock and fear plagued the Japanese-Americans as a result of the internment camps.
false
They feared the spread of Communism
they fear the comunism
they fear the comunism
It caused a fear of foreign influence in the United States.
It caused a fear of foreign influence in the United States.
They feared monarchy.
No. That kind of fear is a result of things that happen in life to people.
The ideas of the French Revolution were democracy. If the Russian people began thinking those things, they would threaten the tsar's power at the least or even dethrone him.
The states would have too much power.
The effects on the internment of Japanese-Americans was negative psychologically. Shock and fear plagued the Japanese-Americans as a result of the internment camps.
The Russian revolution and ouster of the Czarist regime placed many nations in fear that their history of oppression might lead to similar revolution. This fear was invoked by the Industrial Barons who had considerable influence in high political and media positions.
This is an ignorant question; the simple answer is that Muslims do not fear Americans.