Imagine: April 1917. The Finnish railway station, a armored car, the famous speech "There is such a party!" But Vladimir Ilyich does not pronounce it aloud — he posts a message in a Telegram channel. Thousands of workers and soldiers like it, repost "The April Theses" in the "OKNA ROSTA" public group, and Mensheviks try to ban him for misinformation. Sounds like madness, but let's imagine: what if Lenin in 1917 had modern internet? Mobile phones, social networks, viral videos, and recommendation algorithms — how would they change the course of the revolution, the Civil War, and possibly the entire 20th century?
The real "April Theses" were met with hostility by party members: Kamenev and Rykov called them "nonsense." In the internet reality, it would have been different. Lenin launches a video on YouTube: "THE WORLD — TO THE PEOPLES! THE LAND — TO THE PEASANTS! THE FACTORIES — TO THE WORKERS!" Short, bold, to the rhythm of music. A checklist "10 steps to seize power" in the style of info-cigan would go viral on TikTok. A Telegram bot would distribute cards with quotes. Moderate socialists would end up in an information hole: they did not understand algorithms, could not shoot shorts, did not know what targeting was. Within three months, the Bolsheviks would have transformed from a marginal party into the main trend — not thanks to underground printing houses, but thanks to reach and reposts.
Alexander Kerensky, head of the Provisional Government, was a brilliant orator. But oratory in the 20th century is not the same as the skill of managing a post on Instagram. Kerensky, most likely, would have led a cabinet account with boring phrases: "The government is taking measures." Lenin, on the other hand, would have created a network of Facebook groups ("Mother — soldier," "Worker's backbone," "Factory bell") with personalized agitation. Trolling Kerensky would have become a national sport: a meme with the caption "Minister-President in the bread line" would have spread faster than real frontline reports. In conditions of war and hunger, trust in the government would have fallen even faster — because every second comment under a post would have been "Kerensky — traitor!" from bots (by the way, were there bots back then? Probably anarchists with IP address changes).
Conspiracy is the foundation of Lenin's tactics. With the internet, everything would have become both easier and more dangerous. The Central Committee of the Bolsheviks would have created a secret Telegram channel with two-factor authentication. There they would discuss plans for an armed uprising, coordinate demonstrations. But the Okhrana also did not sleep — they would have hacked accounts, intercepted messages. In real history, Lenin wrote ciphers with milk between the lines. In an alternative reality, he would have encrypted correspondence in WhatsApp, but Plekhanov would have leaked screenshots in "Chat Russian haters." Moreover, Trotsky would have become the king of Twitter battles, gathering hundreds of thousands of subscribers with his witty thread-niters. Kamenev and Zinoviev, on the other hand, would have become famous as "log leakers" after the publication of secret voice messages.
In real history, the Bolsheviks experienced constant financial difficulties. Expropriations, printing houses, weapons — all cost money. With the internet, Lenin would have launched a crowdfunding campaign on the crowdfunding platform "Bombyla." Donations for "liberation of the workers from the chains of capital" would have been supported by thousands of small investors: craftsmen would have donated a ruble, soldiers a half-kopeck. English laborists and German social democrats would have transferred cryptocurrency to party wallets, bypassing state banks. By October, the Bolsheviks' treasury would have been bursting with bitcoins (conditional ones). Smolny would not have had to be taken by force — it would have been bought with the funds raised through the public group "Let's raise money for Lenin's armored car."
The flip side is the total information war. The Civil War would have started not in 1918, but already in November 1917, immediately after the October Revolution, because the internet does not tolerate half-tones. Today you like Lenin, tomorrow they come to you for a search for reposts of the white guard. Social media algorithms would have created echo chambers: reds would have subscribed to red channels, whites to white, green anarchists to the darknet. Disinformation would have multiplied at the speed of a wildfire. Each side would have spread deepfakes: Lenin drinking vodka with Rasputin, Kolchak kissing the kaiser, Makhno selling Ukraine to Petliura. The peaceful alternative (coalition of socialists) would have become impossible — because no one would have agreed in comments, every post would have turned into a fight immediately.
Of course, Lenin was not the only one to get access to the network. Tsarist censorship (and then the censorship of the Provisional Government) tried to block "extremist resources." Roskomnadzor of 1917 would have added "Izvestia" and "Pravda" to the list of prohibited sites. But the Bolsheviks learned to use VPN, proxies, anonymizers, and mirrors — the classic of the genre. The Entente (countries of the West) would have launched propaganda bots: "Lenin — German spy, follow the link." But the Twitter war between Wilson and Lenin would have remained in history as an epic battle of threads. The result — information chaos, in which truth finally mixed with lies, and events were managed not by bayonets, but by hype.
The result of our thought experiment: the internet would not have turned Lenin into a pacifist and would not have canceled the Civil War. The same tasks — seizure of power, suppression of resistance, redistribution of property — would have been solved faster and with fewer human losses at the stage of agitation, but with even harsher repression at the stage of information control. Lenin would have appreciated digitalization, but put it to the service of the party. "Communism is Soviet power plus blockchain," he would have written in his last interview with a YouTube blogger. And we would have liked this post, even knowing how it all ended.
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