Can Communism and democracy coexist? Only future historians can answer this question with any pretense of success. Contemporaries will often confuse the prerequisites for a sane, rational future with the ugly facts of the present. Yet a present answer to this question is important as a guide to further political action.
Several alternatives have been suggested by those who have been concerned with the possibility of the coexistence of democracy and Communism. Many theorists have been motivated by the hope of seeing either one or the other system destroyed in order to assure to a chaotic world peace based upon at least a minimum of uniformity. There have been some who, on the contrary, have discovered positive values in a bipolarized world, hoping, no doubt, that the world as a whole would benefit from ideological competition. There have been others, and their number is constantly declining, who feared the inherent dangers of bipolarization and who had hoped that coexistence would take the form of reconciliation.