They were the control and absolute monarchy; they strived to increase industry, the capital, and essentially make themselves number one as the other classes disappeared into the shadows. The bourgeoisie played a huge part in the revolution, but along the way they stripped humanity from the proletarians simply for the increase of industry, for more machines and money. They used the labor workers as puppets for their own advances, as stated in the ‘Community Manifesto’, “The bourgeoisie has torn away from the family its sentimental veil, and has reduced the family relation to a mere money relation” To them, anything and everything had to be done to continue expanding the market of productions. People and nations became simply another piece of property to them, another piece to the puzzle to make everyone adopt their way of production. Evermore they wanted the people and nations to fall into their image and to become more scattered into their manufacturing industry. This increasing expansion became the constant goal of this movement no matter the circumstances. Even if that mean the deterioration of people and families, cutting wages from the lower class, and overall destruction to achieve that …show more content…
The struggles of everything allowed the proletarians to become stronger and more determined to become their own political party. They could have stopped and allowed themselves to just only be defined as a product to the industry, but instead they overcame and created the next revolutionary class of people. It started with strikes, riots and battles and eventually the proletarians who were once so little and almost decaying became the higher status of people. Of course all the proletarians had to make sure there was a common ground between them and their own bourgeoisie. The once proclaimed champions of the industrialization now started to fall behind as the proletarians were now the majority. They eventually break out into a war that would be more like a civil war, fighting for essence of