(Wall Street Journal) On a summer visit to the grave of Karl Marx, Ben Gliniecki found that he would have to pay £4, or about $6, to pay respects to the man who sounded the death knell for private property.
Mr. Gliniecki, a Marxist, said no.
"Personally, I think it is disgusting," the 24-year-old political activist said. "There are no depths of irony, or bad taste, to which capitalists won't sink if they think they can make money out of it."
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The charity that looks after this cemetery has long taken swipe at a different irony: Karl Marx's decision to buy a burial plot in a private London graveyard over the then state-provided alternatives. They say their cover fee subsidizes the upkeep of a cemetery where 170,000 other people rest.