Archive for the ‘Communism’ Category

St. Joseph, Communism and the Radio Tower of Babel – National Catholic Register

Come, let us make a city and a tower, the top whereof may reach to heaven, and let us make our name famous ... (Genesis 11:4)

The American poet Ezra Pound declared 1922 Year Zero.

In the spring issue of that years avant-garde American literary journal Little Review, Pound, whose mantra was Make It New, published a calendar for this dawning epoch.

The months of the year were renamed after pagan deities, both Greek and Roman. More surprisingly, though, this new Year Zero had the letters p.s.U added to it. These letters stood for post scriptum Ulysses, or after the writing of Ulysses. This referred to the February 1922 publication in Paris of James Joyces novel Ulysses. In renaming of the divisions of time, turning the clock to zero, and conflating this with the birth of literary modernism, Pound was indicating the type of world that was to come.

There were others who shared this desire to commence a Year Zero, to destroy the existing order, and who were equally single-minded in their resolve.

In 1917, in the space of just nine months, Russia suffered two revolutions. By February 1917, the Russian monarchy had collapsed; in October, the Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Lenin, had seized power, leading to a bloody civil war. Conservative estimates put the death toll of this revolution and subsequent civil war at 7 million; others estimate that there may have been as many as 13 million lives lost. By December 1922, the creation of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was declared. Thereafter, for seven decades, Communism was the official political ideology in the newly established Soviet Union.

In the midst of the Great Influenza epidemic, on July 30, 1919, Lenin signed a decree of the Council of Workers' and Peasants Defense. The decree demanded in an extremely urgent manner a radio station equipped with the most advanced and powerful devices and machines.

The 240 tons of metal required for its construction was allocated from the stocks of the military department by Lenins personal decree. Only a few miles from the Kremlin in Moscow, the center of Soviet power, work on the radio mast began under the Russian engineer Vladimir Shukhov. On Feb. 28, 1922, the 160-meter (525-foot) radio tower was completed. It would be known as the Shukhov Tower.

The year 1919 had also marked the start of what would become known as the Soviet-Polish War. Lenin, Trotsky and others had determined that now was the time for a global Socialist revolution to commence. And so, Soviet tanks and troops rolled into Poland en route to Berlin, Paris and eventually, they hoped, the whole of Western Europe, bringing all under the Red Star of Communism.

On Aug. 15, 1920, this plan came to a shuddering halt. Polish forces, until then unable to repel the Soviet Red Army, finally rallied and repulsed the invader. That victory came to be known as the Miracle of Vistula, on account of what some claimed was the intervention of heavenly powers against the godless forces of the Soviets.

Lenins longed-for world revolution through military means was, for now at least, no longer viable. By 1922, therefore, that same revolution was to be pursued by means of modern communication, in particular by radio. From the start of the Russian Revolution of 1917, Lenin viewed radio broadcasting as one of the chief methods for the social control of the masses. It is not without significance that radio stations were targeted for destruction by Bolsheviks early on in 1917. Given the size of the emerging Soviet Union, the diversity of its nationalities and poor communication links, the significance of this new medium as a practical and effective way of communicating within this polity became clear. But Lenins vision for radio and grasp of its power as a propaganda tool was not limited to those already living in the nascent Soviet Union.

Invented at the end of the 19th century, the first radio broadcast took place in 1906, when an inventor from the General Electric Company (GEC) developed a device capable of transmitting the human voice over radio waves. The year 1922 was a significant year for radio: The first BBC radio broadcasts came from London; Radio Tour Eiffel in Paris also started transmitting weather bulletins; the first National Radio Conference was convened in Washington, D.C.; Warren Harding became the first U.S. president whose voice was heard live on radio, broadcasting a speech to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. By the end of 1922, there were 670 commercial radio stations licensed in the United States. Reflecting the rise and the significance of this new medium, on March 10, 1922, Variety magazines front-page headline read: Radio Sweeping Country 1,000,000 Sets in Use.

On the feast of St. Joseph, March 19, 1922, with broadcasting transmitters installed on top of the Shukhov Tower, radio broadcasting commenced from Russia. Transmitter power on the tower was 100 kW, giving any transmissions a range of 10,000 kilometers. The Shukhov Tower was more powerful than any radio station in Paris, Berlin or even New York City.

In the 1920s, radio receivers were expensive at least for Soviet society and therefore rare. Lenin saw radio broadcasts as a paperless newspaper and, consequently, an effective means of spreading communist propaganda among the still largely illiterate masses. He decreed loudspeakers be installed in places of public gathering to make the states speaking newspaper accessible to all. Every village should have radio! he said. Every government office, as well as every club in our factories, should be aware that at a certain hour they will hear political news and major events of the day. This way our country will lead a life of highest political awareness, constantly knowing actions of the government and views of the people.

Print media was still employed for anti-religious propaganda, however. Godless at the Machine was one such magazine. Published and distributed by the atheistic Soviet state, the magazine mocked Christianity with satirical images and articles. In the ninth issue of 1924, an article entitled The Radio Tower featured the recently constructed Shukhov Tower. On the page was an image of the avant-garde tower dwarfing the ancient Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow then the largest church building in Russia. The accompanying text describes the radio tower soaring ever upwards, while the image presented is of the tower gripping, vice-like, the cathedral below it, and, seemingly, by so doing, crushing any life out of it.

The Soviet authorities understood the power of radio. The All-Union Radio Station was launched by Lenin in November 1924. Its first regular broadcasts were produced in Moscow on the Comintern Radio Station, using the Shukhov Tower. The expansion of radio broadcasts in the Soviet Union was firmly under the control of the communist authorities.

As a result of extensive state funding, the Soviet Union became a world leader in the development of the new medium of radio throughout the 1920s. By 1925, for example, the worlds first shortwave radio station was operational from the Soviet capital. Radio Moscow, also known as Radio Moscow World Service, began its first foreign-language broadcast in German on Oct. 29, 1929; broadcasts in English and French soon followed. Reports came of Londoners clearly hearing Soviet propaganda, in English, via their radio sets. The world revolution was being pursued by every means possible.

In 1917, at Fatima in Portugal, three children Lcia dos Santos, 10 years old, and her cousins, 9-year-old Francisco and 7-year-old Jacinta Marto had visions of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In one of those apparitions, on July 13, 1917, the children were granted a vision of hell, and Our Lady warned them of future wars unless the consecration of Russia to my Immaculate Heart took place. She went on, If my requests are heeded, Russia will be converted, and there will be peace; if not, she will spread her errors throughout the world, causing wars and persecutions of the Church. In the end, my Immaculate Heart will triumph. The Holy Father will consecrate Russia to me, and she will be converted, and a period of peace will be granted to the world.

On Oct. 13, 1917, what has come to be known as the Miracle of the Sun took place. Some estimate as many as 70,000 gathered with the young visionaries that day when there seemed to be a solar suspension of movement, before the sun appeared rapidly to descend to the Earth. To the three children, there followed another apparition of the Holy Family. Lcia was to write subsequently of this: Our Lady, having disappeared in the immensity of the firmament, we saw, beside the sun, St. Joseph with the Child Jesus and Our Lady clothed in white with a blue mantle. St. Joseph and the Child Jesus seemed to bless the world with gestures which they made with their hands in the form of a cross.

In October 1917, the Bolshevik Revolution was well underway in Russia. It proved to be a bloody one. The Black Book of Communism: Crimes Terror and Repression (1997) records how forces under Lenin killed hundreds of thousands of anti-Bolshevik workers and peasants and how tens of thousands died in Soviet labor camps. It was also under Lenins rule that a famine was engineered, which claimed 5 million lives. Later, with Stalin as leader, more than 690,000 individuals suspected of being political opponents were assassinated in the Great Purge; and, on his orders, 2 million peasants known as kulaks were also killed. It is reckoned that, in total, some 21 million people perished during the 74 years of the Soviet Unions existence.

Today, the Soviet Union is no more. Officially, it ended on Dec. 8, 1991, the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception of Mary, when it was announced that the Commonwealth of Independent States would replace the political entity once known as the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Two years later, in 1993, Radio Moscow ceased broadcasting.

Mirroring similar consecrations by Pope Pius XII (1952) and Pope St. John Paul II (1982 and again 1984), Pope Francis consecrated the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary on Oct. 13, 2013, before the original statue of Our Lady of Fatima, which had been brought from Fatima to St. Peters Basilica in Rome.

In 2014, the Shukhov Tower, which had long fallen silent and ceased broadcasting communist propaganda, was facing demolition by the Russian State Committee for Television and Radio Broadcasting. The demolition was later stayed. Instead, it was proposed that the tower should be preserved as a monument but as a memorial to what, has yet to be determined. To the ideology that erected the tower, there is, of course, already a legacy, namely, 21 million graves.

One hundred years after construction started on the Shukhov Tower, and in the midst of a global influenza pandemic, Pope Francis declared not a Year Zero but one dedicated to St. Joseph, which ran from Dec. 8, 2020, to Dec. 8, 2021.

The Protector of the Church with the Child in his arms was once more to bless the world.

See original here:
St. Joseph, Communism and the Radio Tower of Babel - National Catholic Register

The Young Communist League in Great Britain is growing here’s why. – Communist Party USA

Over 30 years on from the dissolution of the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB), British communism has reached a new juncture, characterized by defiance of the anti-communist myths of the past and faith that Marxism-Leninism is the political path best suited to turning the looming contradictions in contemporary capitalism climate collapse and rapidly rising inequality into a revolution.

The end of the beginning

November 1991 marked the end of the CPGB. A party once feared by the British establishment was disbanded and its assets transferred to Democratic Left, a mere pressure group, by the more hard-line section of the Eurocommunist political tendency who controlled the leadership the Young Communist League (YCL) had already been illegitimately liquidated in 1989.

The dissolution of both the CPGB and YCL were part a paradigmatic shift in the Western world following the collapse of the USSR and Eastern Block that saw many on the left shift their support from the seemingly archaic and discredited ideology of Marxism-Leninism towards broadly liberal ideas around humanitarianism, namely that of think-tanks and NGOs. In 1991, the final CPGB general secretary Nina Temple proclaimed: The internationalism of the 1990s will be as much informed by Greenpeace and Oxfam, as communism once was by Marx and Engels.

The liquidationists followed the mainstream, establishment view that communism was a failed experiment that had not been able to compete with the dynamism and creativity of capitalism. The retreat from materialist analysis and class struggle amongst the dominant faction of the CPGB had been clear for some time. Internal opposition towards elements of Marxism-Leninism within the CPGB had existed as far back as the 1956 Hungarian Uprising. By 1991, the majority were in favor of dissolution, whilst a minority of organized Marxist-Leninists in the Party who stayed on until the bitter end went on to found Communist Liaison and the Communist Trade Unionists group.

In reaction to the Eurocommunist leaderships disavowal of the basics of Marxism, the Communist Party of Britain (CPB) had been founded in 1988. Made up of former members of the CPGB who had been expelled, and later ushering in the remaining Marxist-Leninist members of the original party after its dissolution, the CPB became the de facto Communist Party, a continuation of the party founded in 1920, with the Democratic Left crowd having vacated this space entirely.

Under extreme pressure, with most of its property and assets effectively stolen, and struggling against widely held misconceptions about communism that even supposed Marxists now saw as common sense, the CPB refused to surrender their politics to appease triumphal liberals and fought to defend the influence of communism by holding onto their networks within the labor movement, maintaining the Morning Star daily newspaper, rebuilding an openly communist presence in political movements and re-founding the YCL.

Being a Marxist-Leninist in Britain in the period between 1991 and the financial crisis in 2008 was not an easy task but now, over 30 years on from this rebirth, the fruits of this ideological commitment by older comrades have begun to flower with a new generation of members in both the CPB and YCL, solidifying Marxism-Leninisms relevance in contemporary British politics.

In 2021 the CPBs 56th party congress counting, as it should, the congresses of the original CPGB as its own was its biggest since the 1980s, with party membership increasing by 63% that year alone. The YCLs growth has also been rapid, going from 100 members in 2016 to over 500 in 2021. How has this resurgence come about?

Structural factors

In 2020 the Communist Partys program, Britains Road to Socialism was updated to include a new section on the general crisis of capitalism explaining that the long period of economic growth for the West following the Second World War had finally ended. This is the reality we live in. It is a cliche that every generation of young people think they have it worse than those before them, but if you were born in the last 30 years this is actually true. Real wages have been falling since the 1970s the value of what we are paid at work will buy us less than it would have for generations before us. On top of that, the safety nets that existed until the 1980s have been removed stable employment in nationalized industries, cheap and plentiful council housing, straightforward and non-punitive welfare at acceptable levels are all gone.

Instead, we find ourselves gouged by a myriad of spivs: our council swimming pool is now called Fitness Plus and costs 40 a month not 50p a visit; its cheaper to fly to Berlin than to catch a train from London to Scotland. Indignities both large and small that all add up to something much worse than a sting in our pockets theres less and less point in even trying, in believing in the economy as it is when there is less and less opportunity to achieve even a fraction of the security our parents had.

We are a generation who cannot be bought off by the Thatcherite promise that one day we will own our own home; when we spend on average a third of our income on rent, its impossible to save seriously which means in a very material sense, it is impossible for us to keep faith in the system. We know we are paying off a mortgage its just someone elses.

For the generations of leftist youth that came before after the 1945 post-war settlement the system had a way out bourgeoisification, becoming petty-bourgeois or middle class, via the universities. Our predecessors were able to turn their passion for knowledge about class oppression, Marxism, economics, politics and society into qualifications that gave them buy-in with the system, as well as a decent wage.

This tactic of middle-class expansion peaked in the early 2000s when just over half of young people attended some form of university, then crashed in the 2010s, not only due to the introduction of tuition fees but the growing realization that the notion that a degree would deliver a middle-class life was a mirage the middle class was being liquidated by neoliberalism, just like everything else, to fuel a society of extreme inequality.

In light of this all, capitalist democracy is an irrelevant circus, a soap opera that says almost nothing about the direction of society and our place within it. Its inability to respond to crises as local as the massive increase in families relying on food banks to those as big as climate change is obvious.

But why would this mean that Marxism-Leninism, the most maligned ideology, apparently grey and lifeless at best, or blood-drenched and brutally genocidal at worst, appears as an answer to these structural problems rather than the alternatives? The answer is the same in the current period as it was in the heyday of Marxism-Leninism between the 1920s and 1950s: the successes of Marxism-Leninism and the failures of everything else.

The 1990s and its alternatives: their turn next?

Although alternative, more liberal movements than Marxism-Leninism grew on the left after the collapse of official communism in 1990, they never came close to the size and penetration of the communist parties of the past. To discuss them is not to exaggerate their importance, but to look at why this is, which in turn will help us understand why Marxism-Leninism is making a comeback.

By far the biggest Marxist current in the UK by 1990 was Trotskyism, which, whatever criticisms people may have, adheres to a Leninist structure but opposed the USSR and all the other states that Marxist Leninists refer to as the actually existing socialist (AES) such as China, Cuba, the DPRK, Vietnam and Laos today, and the USSR, Hungary, Poland, DDR/East Germany etc. up until around 1990.

The major UK Trotskyist parties celebrated the collapse of the USSR and eastern block and declared the other AES countries doomed to their own democratic revolutions soon. The mentality was that the system of one-party socialist rule in all AES countries had failed, vindicating Soviet dissident Leon Trotsky at last and that after Stalinism it would be their turn next.

From a liberal-left, anti-communist perspective why not? Socialism without the horrible police state clamping down on poets and dreamers, surely that would be more popular than official communism ever was? Instead, all Trotskyist predictions were wrong from the idea that the remaining AES countries would soon collapse (none did) to the idea that the counter-revolution in the USSR and Eastern Europe were in fact going to lead to better and deeper socialism (every single one has to lead to capitalism, in some cases civil war, ethnic cleansing, and far-right governments).

On the domestic front, other fanciful Trotskyist predictions or assumptions failed to materialize, draining their recruits reserves of enthusiasm and burning their credibility with everyone else feminism, ecology and above all anti-racism failed to turn to the left and bolster their ranks. Capitalism continued to boom well past their predictions, all the way until 2008. The unions continued to decline in numbers and power, and crucially, assaults on the welfare state and workers rights failed to create the predicted fightback, which was, according to them, always just around the corner.

Although the class struggle raged in this period, the proletarian side was still in decline, as was support for socialism. Trotskyism failed to grow significantly along with the left and unions in general. This debunked the widely held belief that Stalinism had been holding them back, by giving socialism a bad name and directly sabotaging Trotskyisms radical plans for leadership of the labor movement.

Despite a shot in the arm from the anti-war movement around 2003 to 2005, their membership continued to decline from its high point in the 1970s, and their desperate turn to identity politics to seduce student members only created the ground for later problems when the reality of Trotskyist-style democratic centralism crashed against the festival of liberation, freedom, and self-actualization they had promised their young wards.

Between 2010 and 2015 Trotskyism entered its most profound and rapid decline, an existential crisis that saw numerous organizations drop to double digits or disband. Corbyns Labour essentially poached their remaining demographic along with many other social strata for good.

But what about the anti-capitalist movement of movements that sprung from radical environmentalism (lots of useful ideas here), neo-anarchism and postmodern-left ideas that eschew labels (of no use at all actively harmful)? And if Trotskyism was a variant of the failed state-socialist, authoritarian project, shouldnt the alternative left have a lot more appeal and a lot more to analyze? In short, no and also no.

To give it its due, the alternative left after 1990 did make an impact at its two high points anti-globalization summit crashing, like the anti-WTO protests in Seattle 1999, and the Occupy movement of 2011. These, directly and indirectly, politicized hundreds of thousands of people who would go on to be class fighters in part because of the soft-touch they received in the liberal media and popular culture, selling thousands of books, newspapers and even films.

From the accessible reformism of Noam Chomsky and the outlandish anarchist anthropology of David Graeber to the highly academic autonomism of Franco (Bifo) Berardi, and its associates Deleuze and Guattari, anti-state leftism does have a lot of ideas that might provoke and engage newcomers to the left; but it has little of anything else looking at the lack of actual achievements of the 1990s and 2000s, beyond all the books and articles, shows this beyond any doubt.

It failed dramatically to demonstrate the worth of its supposed alternatives to majority voting and formal membership organizations run with discipline, aiming at state power. There is simply nothing to analyze concretely other than failed experiment after the failed experiment: they never won for long enough to govern (in whatever radical horizontal way theyd like to).

Now writing at a time when anti-state leftism of both postmodern and anarchist varieties has disappeared in Britain to pre-1960 levels, it is almost amazing to think how little an impression all those weird and wonderful ideas have left on the tactics and ideology of the left today, which has returned to the traditional pillars of either social democracy or Marxism. We do owe them a debt, however they failed, so we dont have to.

The successes of Marxism-Leninism

Although the internet was hailed as putting the final stake in the heart of authoritarian socialism by providing a network for horizontally organized anti-capitalism, in fact, the sudden deluge of free-flowing information not edited by capitalist media debunked myths propagated against communism that had been obscured or undermined in mainstream and even left-wing Western media too.

The internet changed all that, especially from the period known as web 2.0 when interactive, user-generated platforms such as blogging, vlogging, wikis, discussion boards etc. became accessible to anyone we can measure the rapid growth of interest in Marxism-Leninism from roughly 2005.

Now, young people drawn to the glory and success of official communism for its numerous victories over capitalism could take a balanced view of its excesses and failures with reference sources from the time, the once-obscure writings of communist leaders and thinkers, and best of all, to people who had actually lived in the Eastern Bloc and USSR, via the internet. They could also hear from the same sources what had been amazing about state socialism in contrast to the nightmarish circumstances foisted upon them by the restoration of capitalism. People felt lied to, and over time, indignance at capitalist smears developed into full-blown support for communism.

This internet-enabled Marxism-Leninism was not limited to the nostalgia of course, as increasingly the surviving AES countries were accessible online too you could now hear what China had to say about its politics or watch YouTube videos from socialists on their daily lives in Vietnam. The successes of Cuban medicine and the education system in Kerala were able to be broadcast worldwide, and the smaller successes of communist parties outside of power too.

It was now obvious to young people in the West that state socialism in the past and present was not simply a great system that delivered better health, better living standards, better stability, better equality, more leisure time and above all, meaning to life as a community rather than a mass of competing individuals it was also obvious that state socialism and its overarching ideology of Marxism-Leninism was a living success whose global adherents numbered in the millions.

20152019: a sojourn in Social Democracy

Given the economic situation, it was natural that the last decade would see a resurgent left aiming at state power via elections in the West, with a significant and often dominant youth element Syriza in Greece, Podemos in Spain, Bernie Sanders in the US and Jeremy Corbyn in Britain. Although these were all left-to-liberal, reformist and non-Marxist projects, for the US and UK at least, they reflected a change so profound that most Marxist-Leninists correctly saw their potential for redefining politics permanently.

At the height of Corbyns popularity membership of the Labour Party reached 500k members. If the CPB and YCL had been opposed to LP in this era it would have critically discredited itself instead, it did the opposite, and gained credibility in the eyes of future supporters and members. It was the CPB and YCL that correctly criticized Labours retreat on Brexit and instead endorsed Lexit, correctly argued that the new movement needed to be deepened beyond elections and embedded in organized struggle, and correctly defended Labour against the antisemitism smear campaign. Although other groups did some of these things, none did all of them.

Another important stance was the refusal to fold the CPB and YCL to become a clandestine entryist front within the Labour membership, despite the closeness of Corbyn to the CPB, Morning Star, and associated parts of the left. This is due to the principled and ambitious stance of Britains Road to Socialism, which was almost uniquely suited to the moment: the BRS argues that due to its direct connection to the trade unions, the Labour Party is not simply a liberal party, and a left-led Labour government is a key stage in building socialism for the CPB. However, this is to be done alongside Labour, openly, by building a communist movement in the unions and society in general, by intervention not in Labour, but the class struggle itself.

When Labour failed in 2019 in quite a spectacular fashion, and a ruthless right-wing regained power, the CPB and YCL were vindicated and became a natural home for the Marxist contingent of former Labour supporters who had been radicalized or re-radicalized by Corbynism.

Now is the time to respectfully criticize failings of the Labour Party under Corbyn the misunderstanding of the subversive nature of the culture wars and identity politics, the failure to be disciplined against traitors and bad-faith actors, the uneven social makeup of the new membership, the lack of actual community and industrial organizing and many other things. But the years 2015-2019 must be remembered for what they really represent; not a failure at all, but a huge leap forward in support for socialism and millions of Britons thinking seriously about what the left in power would look like. That cannot be forgotten instead, we must go forward.

Cautiously optimistic: where do we go from here?

In the last five years, the YCL has experienced rapid expansion, an increasingly steep upward curve, a situation of exponential growth where greater numbers lead to greater ability to be active, leading to greater visibility and relevance and a greater number of applicants. Obviously, this will reach a natural plateau at some point, but as we are still miles away from even having all the young people who identify as communists in our ranks, that plateau is not expected anytime soon.

Take the last year as an example of how YCL activity has itself played a key role in our growth. Foodbank collections were rolled out nationwide, giving our presence on the high streets a direct purpose with social good, and providing a jumping-off point to talk about poverty and class. In our Lanarkshire branch, this is developing into a food-growing co-op.

Challenge has been relaunched online and its articles are being picked up by the wider left, an unprecedented rise in its reach, while our social media presence has drastically increased in its first year our Instagram has gained 10,000 followers.

Our biggest congress since the 1980s was well organized with a high level of discipline and engagement, with passionate debate and tight votes reflecting a vibrant internal democracy. Considerations around atmosphere and presentation made sure it felt unlike the often slightly awkward and apologetic meetings typical of the left and reflected the messaging throughout the year that we were celebrating our 100th anniversary with outward displays of pride.

Our annual summer camp was a similar success, again, record attendance and all sessions and infrastructure confidently organized by the YCL alone. Sessions on workplace organizing from our numerous workplace activists, reps and union full-timers reflected both the class make-up of the organization and its focus on class struggle rather than movementism and fad-chasing.

Developing a visible communist presence on marches and memorials that is open and proud about our politics, both dignified and militant, rolled out nationally as policy, which has led to media attention from the Sun, the Daily Mail and the Independent to name a few. Our block in Glasgow during Cop26 was the largest of any political block on the march, and when it was attacked by the police the YCL gained national attention and widespread support from the unions, wider left and even those that fervently disagree with our politics. The following week saw a wave of applications.

None of this has been too ambitious or required fanatical dedication and full-time organizers in fact, its been quite moderate in terms of the amount of activity we would like to achieve in future. What marks it out is that most of these kinds of activities and especially the style in which they were carried out has been absent from the left for at least a decade, and in some cases, absent from the Marxist left for far longer. There is no reason not to expect this year to be equally dynamic if not more so.

In the last 10 years we have seen numerous new communist groups and initiatives led by young people pop up and burn out, leaving almost nothing behind we are deeply aware of those groups failings and the dangers we must avoid, and this influences our interest in being in a serious party with a long legacy and tradition to defend, rather than letting political, and as is more common in todays left, personal problems define us instead of our commitment to building a unified communist movement.

So, while a rebirth of interest in Marxism-Leninism was likely given the factors discussed in the previous sections, the growth of one single organization, which has already survived serious attempts to destroy it from within and without in the last year alone, was far from inevitable: the seriousness with which the current membership of the YCL have approached their tasks is a central factor in the groups growth.

What the YCL lacks and now needs more of is campaigning targets and plans for longevity, as well a centralized system of ruthlessly evaluating our work. The wider YCL must continue to follow the example of our best branches and become campaigning groups in and of themselves, as well as be active in the existing class struggles.

We need to be ready to take action against social ills caused by capitalism in our areas against anything from bad landlords, to army recruiters, predatory betting shops and loan shark companies, bailiffs, any new far-right groups, privatizers, exploitative bosses etc. we will know our own territory best and must assess it properly to take action as part of the class, in its class interests.

At the same time, we must walk the fine line of providing social goods too, without becoming a prop for the system or doing charity work in this task we should think about establishing institutions, sometimes physically with rented, occupied or even eventually owned spaces to provide facilities for ourselves to meet the demands of our fellow workers. Looking back at the history of the YCL and CPB, this would not be a first.

We have gained a lot of attention, but we must deepen our cultural presence communism must continue to make headway into the social lives of youth. Given that in the 1967 the YCLs Trend festival had the Kinks headline, notable musicians such as Pete Townshend from the Who became members, and the Beatles were interviewed in Challenge magazine there is no reason why we shouldnt aim beyond local cinema clubs, gigs, club nights, sports clubs and so on towards an annual music and politics festival, open to all.

Conclusion: socialism as a way of life

We have inherited a mighty tradition, and owe it to all the YCL and CP comrades who have come before us to continue to confound the critics and make our work more and more relevant to more and more young people despite the massively changed political circumstances from the heyday of communism in Britain in the last century, we genuinely believe, given all the factors outlined here, that unapologetic Marxism-Leninism will become the guiding ideology and movement of this and the next generation of those who are ready to reject capitalism and go beyond sporadic rebellions to build strong socialist organizations.

The ideology and collective identity of the current YCL is summed up by our slogan conquer your future. We are not fixated on grievances, wounds, injustice and rebellion, we are focused on power as a goal empowering each other as comrades and the communist movement itself to take an organic leadership role through its direct and successful intervention in the class struggle, embedded in the daily lives of the masses.

We intend to be involved for life, and the YCL is the first stage the one that is naturally seen as being more radical. We cannot promise those in or about to join our ranks the fruits of socialism, but we can say that the skills we are learning and the comradeship we are gaining has materially improved our lives and perhaps most of all given us meaning and purpose in a world of neoliberal nihilism. We will live once, but our organization has already lived 100 years: it is with immense pride that we can say, in time for its centenary year, the YCL is seizing its destiny once again.

We have made the start. When, at what date and time, and the proletarians of which nation will complete this process is not important. The important thing is that the ice has been broken; the road is open, the way has been shown. V. I. Lenin

This article appeared in the Challenge, Feb. 11, 2022, and has been edited for style.Images: YCL Britain; CPB Facebook; Solidarity Food Bank, CPB Facebook; Tuition fee protest, lewishamdreamer, (CC BY-NC 2.0); Jeremy Corbyn, Jenny Goodfellow (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0); YCL protest at CPO 26, YCL, Challenge; Red Veg, YCL Lanarkshire, Challenge; Leaflet, Trend Festival, Challenge.

View original post here:
The Young Communist League in Great Britain is growing here's why. - Communist Party USA

Trevor Loudon: Fighting Communism in the Church and the Ukraine | The Paradise News – The Paradise News

Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 7:05 6.7MB)

Subscribe: | More

Alex Newman of TNA interviews Trevor Loudon, an investigative journalist and anti-Communist expert. They discuss Trevors new documentary film Enemies Within: The Church, which discusses Marxist infiltration in American evangelical churches. Trevor notes that Marxists are trying to pull the church to the left, which would permanently pull America to the left if the church is lost, so will the country. Trevor highlights the positive reaction he has received in response to the documentary.

Alex and Trevor also discuss the conflict between Russia and the Ukraine. Trevor argues that the conflict is an attempt to shift power away from the U.S. and toward Russia and China, which are working together on the world stage. Stating that all three countries are currently led by communists, Trevor notes that in the 1990s, the Ukraine gave up its nuclear weapons in exchange for American protection, but it is not receiving any such protection under Biden who is working against U.S. interests. Trevor calls on Congress to enact effective sanctions against Russia, including kicking out RT and Russian diplomats and non-citizens; he also recommends going the same against China. Trevor recommends against using military force in the Ukraine.

Continued here:
Trevor Loudon: Fighting Communism in the Church and the Ukraine | The Paradise News - The Paradise News

March 8 panel brings together victims of communism from five countries – The Post Millennial

Human Events and the Liberty Forum of Silicon Valley are hosting a five-person discussion panel next Tuesday, titled "Paying the Price Understanding the Life of a Political Dissident." It'll be a conversation with five members who've experienced communist regimes at their zenith in the 20th century.

It'll be both an in-person and virtual event on March 8 at 10 pm EST, 7 pm Pacific Time. The discussion is sponsored by the Victims of Communism Foundation and moderated by Human Events managing editor Brent Hamachek. The registration page says the venue is the Elite Event Center in Santa Clara, California.

Hamachek outlined the inspiration to put on the event in the first place:

"After I gave my talk in July, Peter Palecek, a real-life dissident and now a panel member, came up to me and shared his thoughts on how important the message was. He said that the story I told at the end about a contemporary American dissident woman who was forced to run barefoot on rocks brought tears to his eyes because it brought everything back to him. He also said that everyone in the world needed to hear the message. I felt like we needed to do something like this. Im grateful to the Liberty Forum of Silicon Valley for making it become a reality."

The five guests who, despite coming from various backgrounds, share the same theme of living under a particular kind of authoritarian governmental rule:

Frank de Varona was born in Cuba and spent his early adult years as a member of the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion. He spent a few years in prison as punishment for that, but ultimately managed to return to America and had a successful 38-year long career as a teacher for the Miami-Dade County Public Schools.

The panelist's work as a prolific author and writer has led Varona to discuss what prevalence socialism has had recently here in the United States.

Peter Palecek was born in Czechoslovakia back in 1939, the same year of the Nazi takeover. The Gestapo arrested Palecek's mother during their time in charge. When the communists took over in the country, Palecek's father ended up being sent to a prison camp. Meanwhile, Palecek himself grew up to become a critique of the ruling party and was targeted with surveillance by state forces.

Peter Wolf escaped from East Germany in 1959. The book "Because I Can" captured Wolf's recollections from growing up in East Germany before escaping.

Sutton Van Vo grew up during the tensions in Vietnam during the 20th century. They served as a major for the South Vietnamese army, but then spent over a decade in various prisons throughout the country after the Communist takeover.

Back in 2017, he denounced an 18-hour, 10-part documentary published by Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) about the Vietnam War as "pure propaganda" for their depiction of the conflict. The panelist's main critique was how PBS didn't spend enough time or attention talking about South Vietnam's role.

Tatiana Menaker, who hails from Leningrad in the Soviet Union, ended up writing for an "underground Christian feminist magazine" that eventually led her to arrest. Escaping the Soviet Union, she and her partner fled to America. In a 2016 profile by The Atlantic, they labeled her a "hardcore Republican" who helmed a tour guide business while raising three kids. Eventually Tatiana became outspoken against the Marxism she witnessed as a student at San Francisco State University.

A similar discussion of the onslaught of far-left ideology and the sociopolitical state of the world took place during the "Tocqueville Conversations" conference in France last year. Alexis de Tocqueville's present-day descendant Jean-Guillaume hosted this meeting of the minds to debate American politics.

The rest is here:
March 8 panel brings together victims of communism from five countries - The Post Millennial

What Putin’s war is really about – International Investment

If there was one thing that still united citizens of the Communist block in the early 1990s, it was the widespread hope to escape the Soviet drab, says Johannes Mueller, Head Of Research Macro Research, DWS Group.

No matter their disparate nationalities or their age, citizens hoped for a "normal" life of the sort most citizens of the democratic societies in the "West" take for granted.

Getting richer, but also being able to read and think what you want, and say or write what you think, without the fear of government oppression or foreign invasion.

In purely economic terms, some countries have succeeded better than others, 30 years on, as our "Chart of the Week" illustrates. Measured at current prices and purchasing power parity, it shows that at the end of Communism, Ukraine had roughly the same gross domestic product (GDP) per capita as Poland. Today, it is only a fraction. Poland has even surpassed commodity rich Russia by a decent margin. The same is true of Latvia; the other two Baltic states have done better still.

This probably understates Russia's economic performance from the point of view of its average citizens, not only because of higher income levels than most to begin with, as the imperial and industrial center of the old Soviet bloc. Since 1990 the distribution of income and wealth appears to have become extremely unequal; some estimates suggest that the amount of private wealth siphoned offshore over the years by the very richest Russians stood at about three times the official net foreign reserves by 2015.

For critical Russian journalists deemed incorrigible enemies, the reprisals, intimidation and, ultimately, murders of, began almost immediately upon Putin's initial ascent to power.

For most other Eastern Europeans, notably in Poland and the Baltic states, membership of the European Union (EU) offered an alternative model of how to combine economic with political freedom.

Russia's first invasion of Ukraine in 2014 was sparked by a trade treaty with the EU, not by any realistic prospect of joining NATO. Similarly, the main demands among democracy activists in neighboring Belorussia that prompted the Moscow backed crackdown were better relations with the EU.

Contrary to what Putin seems to think, Ukrainians have long seen themselves as a clearly separate, European nation still in the process of defining where it stands vis a vis its neighbours.

And if that wasn't provocation enough, they want to determine their own future through free and fair elections - as it is normal in most of Europe. That Putin sees it a mortal threat says as much about his regime as the terrible scenes of cities getting bombed the world is currently witnessing.

30 years after the end of Soviet Communism, EU membership has proven a key factor in determining economic performance.

Sources: International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook Database, DWS Investment GmbH as of 10/31/21*Gross domestic product per capita in current price

Here is the original post:
What Putin's war is really about - International Investment