History
China: The long march to modernization Print E-mail
By Heiko Khoo   
Friday, 02 May 2008
chen-duxiu1.jpgOn 4th May 1919 Chinese people marched to end backwardness in China and humiliation by the imperialist powers. They were led by Chen Duxiu. Chen realised that the modernisation of China could only be carried out by the working class and founded the Chinese Communist Party in 1921. For a hundred years the Chinese have engeged on the long and tortuous march to modernisation.
 
1968: Remembering the Spirit of Revolution Print E-mail
By Rob Sewell   
Friday, 25 April 2008
may_68.jpg"...the French events suddenly brought home to me the reality of socialist revolution and how we had entered a new stormy period, which the tendency had predicted. Within a couple of years, the Labour government had fallen and Britain entered a convulsive period including a near general strike. The French events of 1968, after a short delay, had even found an echo in Britain. Those days of 40 years ago will return again. This time we can be better prepared. Without doubt, 1968 will be forever remembered as a political turning point by all those who were touched by those historic events. That was certainly my experience."
 
[Ted Grant Archive Update] - Workers want peace—Bosses prepare for war! Print E-mail
By Ted Grant in 1939   
Tuesday, 22 April 2008
war-prep.jpgWith preparations for war in full swing the small Workers' International League gathered around Ralph Lee and Ted Grant was the only voice that stood out defending a real internationalist position. Here we provide our readers with the lead article of the August 1939 edition of Youth For Socialism, signed by Ted Grant.
 
125 years since the death of Marx: ‘We shall not look back upon his like again’ Print E-mail
By Steve Higham   
Friday, 18 April 2008
marx_engels1.jpgKarl Marx was a man with a family to look after, and a revolutionary who no country acknowledged as citizen. A giant thinker of the modern era who transformed our outlook in philosophy, economics and political thought, Marx's revolutionary activity was hobbled by poverty. Steve Higham chronicles his hardships and achievements a century and a quarter after his death.
 
Race and Class: No lie can live forever Print E-mail
By Ben Peck   
Friday, 04 April 2008
martin-luther-king.jpgToday marks 40 years since the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., shot in the face on the 2nd floor balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee. James Earl Ray was imprisoned for the assassination, though never granted a trial for his murder. Given the US government's targeting of radicalised black leaders at this time, whoever pulled the trigger did the state's dirty work for them. The King family never accepted Ray was responsible.
 
Revolutionary Photography - minus the Revolution Print E-mail
By Melanie MacDonald   
Friday, 04 April 2008
pic11.jpgA major exhibition of the photographic work of Alexander Rodchenko (1891-1956) is currently on at the Hayward Gallery in London. It is sponsored by Roman Abramovich, the billionaire owner of Chelsea Football Club and a supporter of the Moscow House of Photography Museum whose director, Olga Sviblova, curated the show. This important Russian artist is considered one of the most versatile avant-garde artists to have emerged after the Russian Revolution.
 
Oh, what a lovely War! The Royan Pocket; January-April 1945 Print E-mail
By Jim Brookshaw   
Wednesday, 02 April 2008
royan-pocket.jpgThis horrific destruction of French civilians compares with the militarily useless slaughter of the people and cities of Dresden and Magdeburg in the closing days of the War. Was this a warning to the French workers like the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was warning to Stalin: thus far and no farther?
 
A Short history of Inflation Print E-mail
By Socialist Appeal   
Monday, 31 March 2008
inflationmed.jpgThe nineteenth century was an era of price stability. It was also the age of the gold standard. Inflation can have many triggers, but it always involves an increase in money emissions at some point in order to give expression to higher prices. It is difficult to increase the money supply quickly if you have to mine precious metals, so runaway inflation just didn’t happen back then. The government can’t really control inflation. Now it’s back!
 
A Marxist View of the 20th Century. Print E-mail
By Heiko Khoo   
Tuesday, 26 February 2008
hiroshima.jpgHere we publish A Marxist View of the 20th Century, first shown at In Defence of Marxism in 2001. Narrated by Alan Woods, with Lal Khan, Ted Grant and Noam Chomsky.
 
Leon Sedov – 70 years since his murder Print E-mail
By Rob Sewell   
Friday, 15 February 2008
leon_sedov.jpgTomorrow marks the 70th anniversary of the murder of Trotsky's eldest son - Leon Sedov -by agents of the Stalinist secret police, the GPU. He was thirty-two years of age. This crime constituted part of the systematic hounding and murder of Trotsky's key supporters and family, whose only ‘crime' was to defend genuine Marxism against Stalin and the crimes of the Russian bureaucracy.
 
Audio File: Fascism and the Rise of Nazism Print E-mail
By Mick Brooks   
Monday, 11 February 2008
nazi_swastika.jpgThe coming to power of the Nazi party in Germany 75 years ago marks the begining of one of the darkest periods of human history. What is Fascism and how did it emerge in a country with the strongest labour movement in the world? Mick Brooks of Socialist Appeal talks on the story of the rise of the Nazis.
 
Mightier than the sword Print E-mail
By Harry Whittaker   
Friday, 01 February 2008
paine-tom.jpg If there was one man who embodied the spirit of revolutionary democracy, it was Tom Paine. He inspired the American Revolution of 1776, took part in the French Revolution of 1789 and, while abroad in France, was tried in Britain for seditious libel for writing his book 'The Rights of Man'
 
The Pentrich Uprising, 1817 Print E-mail
By David Brandon   
Friday, 01 February 2008
brandrethexec.jpgPentrich in Derbyshire is a quiet place these days. But in 1817 it was the centre of a plot to overthrow the Government of the day. Britain had been at war with Revolutionary and Napoleonic France almost continuously until 1815. When war ended, the economy slumped. It was the poor who had borne the brunt of the fighting. Now they were required to bear the economic and social fallout from the subsequent peace.
 
Trotsky and the fight against Fascism Print E-mail
By Leon Trotsky   
Wednesday, 30 January 2008
trotsky-riverosmall.jpgSeventy-five years ago today, on January 30th 1933, Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany. Two months later the Reichstag voted him dictatorial powers. The workers' parties were banned and their leaders thrown into concentration camps. The strongest labour movement in Europe was destroyed without even breaking a pane of glass, as Hitler boasted. The way was clear for genocide and world war.
 
Why Hitler Came To Power Print E-mail
By Ted Grant, December 1944   
Wednesday, 30 January 2008
hitler1.jpg"The new generation, in particular, must understand the part Stalinism played in German events prior to Hitler's seizure of power, if they wish to understand its present role", wrote Ted Grant in 1944. Trotsky and the Fourth International alone warned of the catastrophe the Nazi's would bring upon the workers of Germany, Europe and of the Soviet Union. The Stalinists surrendered the German masses to Hitler and even proclaimed the coming to power of Hitler as a victory expressing the crisis of capitalism, boastfully proclaiming 'our turn next'.
 
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