As Bertie notes though, this sense of moral outrage didn't stop Butt or the others from helping themselves to all the eats in sight: "It was all very well for Comrade Butt to knock the food, but he had pretty well finished the ham; and if you had shoved the remainder of the jam into the bleeding lips of the starving poor it would hardly have made them sticky."
Comrade Bingo is one of my favourite Jeeves and Wooster stories; it's laugh-out-loud funny in places, and Wodehouse shows the same skill at mocking the pretensions and hypocrisies of the communists as he did in The Code of the Woosters, when he gleefully skewered the fascists in the form of Roderick Spode and his brown shorts.