Risk and Revolution | Wen Stephenson – The Baffler
The laughter is the tell. In a deftly written and acted scene in How to Blow Up a Pipeline, the new action-thriller directed by Daniel Goldhaber (and inspired by Andreas Malms identically titled 2021 book, which, unlike the film, does not describe how to blow up anything), a ragtag group of eight fossil-fuel saboteursyoung, diverse, mostly working class, several from polluted frontline communitiespass a bottle around, blowing off steam the night before they blow up a pipeline in the West Texas desert.
Theyre gonna call us revolutionaries, or game changers, offers Rowan (Kristine Froseth), a waifish blonde anarchist with a smirky grin. Somebody laughs. No, theyll call us terrorists, says dreadlocked, queer Theo (Sasha Lane). And Theo is right. You dont even have to sabotage a pipeline to be called a terrorist in this countryas weve seen in Georgia, where more than forty activists have been charged with domestic terrorism for allegedly damaging property and trespassing while protesting Atlantas Cop City.
But the laughter captures something else about our political-cultural era. Almost no one takes revolution seriouslynot even fictional would-be revolutionaries on screen. And not even in the face of our fossil-fuel driven global emergency. In fact, it would seem the only revolutionaries in this country are found on the far rightas a Proud Boy testified, their goal on Jan. 6, 2021, was all-out revolution.
Most interesting about Goldhabers filmwhich is that rare thing, a thoughtful political action movieis the way it dramatizes and draws out the fears and anxieties of climate activism at this stage of the crisis. (Full disclosure: Im among those whose advice was sought and given at an early stage of the project, but I had no involvement in the films making or any stake in it.) Like the book on which its based, its a film about risk, and the relationship to risk, individual and collective, personal and political. And it raises the deeply discomforting yet urgent question, as does Malms book, of what kinds and degrees of risk may be necessary, if any of us are serious about bringing the radical break with business-as-usual thats now requiredserious, that is, as players and not just chin-stroking, disinterested observers from the gallery. (There is no gallery in the climate catastrophe.) And yet for the most part the respectable left, and the climate left in particularas it goes through the same-old placid motions of politics-and-activism as usualsomehow manages to avoid this very question, even at this late hour.
What could possibly be at the root of this avoidance? Its almost as if a specter haunts the climate left: the specter of revolution, past and future.
To be fair, there are still some on the left who take revolution seriouslyat least on a historical, theoretical, and/or aesthetic levelbut they tend to haunt only the Ivory Tower. One thinks of Enzo Traversos Revolution: An Intellectual History (2021) as a recent example of such seriousness. But overall, theres broad agreement that nothing like a mass revolutionary-left movement actually exists today, other than in the imagination. The Left seems, Traverso writes in that volume, to have completely deserted the terrain on which it had, over the last century, accumulated considerable experience and recorded numerous successes: the armed revolution.
Whether armed or not, violent or not, the point is that revolution is approached seriously now only as history, as collective memory and mourning of the heroically vanquished and tragically betrayed. (Traverso explored this phenomenon in his 2016 book, Left-Wing Melancholia: Marxism, History, and Memory.) And, most often, as cautionary tale. The tragedy of revolutions, Traverso writes in Revolution, lies in the fatal metamorphosis that drives them from liberation to the struggle for survival, and finally to the edification of a new oppressive rule; from emancipating violence to coercive violence.
Of course much depends on what one actually means by revolutionTraverso means a suddenand almost always violentinterruption of the historical continuum . . . a break of the social and political order, which sounds about right to meand what one means by seriously.
China Miville, the acclaimed British novelist and nonfiction writer, wants to revive an explicitly Marxist revolutionary politics, updated for our century. His most recent books, October: The Story of the Russian Revolution (2017) and A Spectre, Haunting (2022), present the revolution of October 1917 and Marx and Engelss Communist Manifesto, respectively, as not only relevant to the present moment but as containing urgent insights and lessons, both positive and negative. Though historical, his project in these books is addressed directly to us, his contemporaries, as political actors, agents of history, potential revolutionary subjects.
This is an invigorating and even awe-inspiring act to behold, not least for the way Miville stares down the reflexive hackles of inveterate cynics. Fuck the cynics, Miville implies. The Manifestos authors, he reminds us, were thunderously uncynical, and Miville, too, is in earnest. He wants us to take revolution seriously not only as intellectual and political history but as living-breathing political practice in the present tense.
Accordingly, Mivilles A Spectre, Haunting is both a reintroduction of the Manifesto (drawing on the vast literature surrounding it) for a new generation of Marx-curious readers and a defense of revolutionary-left politics against the critics and skeptics, all along the ideological watchtower, who reject any such politics out of hand. The strongest weapon against revolution, or any hankering for it, he reminds his readers, is that capitalist-realist common sense that its impossible, even laughable, to struggle or hope for change. . . . a deliberate ruling-class propaganda strategy to discourage any belief in any such possibility.
TheManifestosauthors, he reminds us, were thunderously uncynical, and Miville, too, is in earnest. He wants us to take revolution seriously.
But Miville has no desire to prettify the lefts revolutionary history or engage in apologeticsquite the opposite. Non-dogmatic, full of caveats, and above all, ethically conscious, he engages the text of the Manifesto, its background, and its legacymuch of it brutal and indefensiblein order to preserve or salvage what remains inspiring and useful. To do so requires the readiness to break with Marxist doctrine, to see the past and present without ideological blinders (which is not to say without ideology). In his moving epilogue to October, Miville writes, We know where this is going: purges, gulags, starvation, mass murder. But perfect hindsight, he suggests, can breed illusions of inevitability. Did October lead inexorably to Stalin? he asks. It is an old question, but one still very much alive. Is the gulag the telos of 1917? Miville would have us resist any such interpretations as the sirens of historical necessity and fatalism. October is still ground zero for arguments about fundamental, radical social change, he writes. Its degradation was not a given, was not written in any stars.
What kind of revolution, then, is Miville hankering for (all caveats and disclaimers duly acknowledged)? Again taking his cue from the Manifesto and its authors, he is clearly not advocating a mere political revolution, that which topples a government and replaces it while leaving the underlying social order intact. Nevertheless, Miville wants a revolutionary left that allows for any number of models, including the possibility of peaceful revolutionwhich, he notes, Marx and Engels themselves did not rule out. What he wants to avoid is a strain of showboating machismo within the Left that dismisses anything less than the model of October 1917 as effete perfidy. And yet, he notes, that kind of toxic border-guarding no doubt arises in part from the fact that revolutionary is an easy word to throw around and domesticate. (Theyre gonna call us revolutionaries . . .)
Its clarifying, therefore, when Miville spells out, in the Manifestos terms, what he identifies as the three key elements of a Marxist social revolution worthy of the name. First, he writes, its aim is rupture. Its point isnt merely amelioration, but the overthrow of the existing order. Second, he tells us, this is a project with enemies. . . . To the ruling class as a class, this is an existential threat, to be fought by any means available. And their counter-revolutionary project might win. The all-important third point, then, is that revolutionists cannot shy away from the necessity of struggle.
Struggle, rupture, overthrow; but not, necessarily, by any means. Miville is no crude nihilist. He has a genuine concern for the moral-ethical basis of social revolution itself, even as found in the Manifesto, despite its authors claims to have thrown off all bourgeois morality. The relationship between coercion, force and violence is crucial here, Miville writes. Depending on how much social weight a movement has, how strategically it deploys it, actual violence, in no way a good in itself, can be minimized.
Indeed, on this crucial question, Miville goes on to argue that Marx and Engelss judgment of capitalist exploitation and oppression was itself an inherently moral oneas was their vision of the communist alternative. Marx and Engels, he notes, hold so-called civilization to be itself a barbarous and violent system. It follows, then, Miville writes:
This is not to be relaxed about violence on any side, but to contest the image of revolution as an irruption of violence into a peaceable system. Its to accept, rather, the necessity of violence against violence, to fight for the end of the mass death and social violence which underpins capitalism, surrounds us, at a greater scale today even than it did the Manifestos authors.
Mass death and social violence at a greater scale today . . . And were back to where we started: a global ecological and social catastrophe driven by fossil capital and the demands of untrammeled production and profitand the effort to stop it somewhere short of total destruction (an outcome, never mind what you may have heard, that is still very much on the table).
To his credit, Miville addresses the planetary crisis head-on in A Spectre, Haunting, but the discussion arrives, as it were, too little and too late, in a brief section sandwiched into the final chapter. Like so many of his peers among left intellectuals, Miville is slow to come around to the climate catastrophe. If he took it as seriously as called for, it would frame the whole book; treating it as an afterthought wont do any longer. Its been said before, but perhaps the full implications of climate science are simply too radical, even for radicals. That is, climate catastrophe threatens the material conditions on which the whole socialist project rests. Miville, as a founding member of the Salvage Collective, knows this well, of course, and it goes to the heart of his response to the crisis:
To read the Manifesto today, is to have to acknowledge that after centuries of exploitation and planetary degradation, the rupture is more urgent than everand is unlikely to be into a realm of freedom and plenty, but of necessary slow repair.
There is a world to win: won, it must be fixed. This is ruin communism, or salvage communism. As part of such project, nave dreams of profligacy have to be set aside.
Won, it must be fixed. I wish this were convincing. But the problem with Mivilles formulation, and its not an uncommon one, is the assumption that we still have time to win the worldon Marxist terms, no lessbefore we begin to fix it. In fact, according to climate science, we barely have time to stop the hemorrhaging. Its one thing to keep the revolutionary flame alive, and to make the non-falsifiable claim that another world is possible, that the revolution this time may succeed without betraying its principles and devouring its own. Its another thing entirely when you slam up against the hard limits of physics and chemistryand time. If you insist that the social revolutionrather than something like the mere political varietymust come first, then theres a strong chance that there wont be a world to win, nothing to salvage.
Andreas Malm is a Marxist intellectual and agitator who not only grasps this grim truth about our situation but says it out loudeven writes books about it.
In his pamphlet Corona, Climate, Chronic Emergency: War Communism in the Twenty-First Century (2020)which preceded How to Blow Up a Pipeline by just a few months in the midst of the pandemics first yearMalm lays out the case for strong medicine, what he calls ecological Leninism, to stem the planetary catastrophe. He argues that only centralized state powernationalization of all private companies extracting and processing and distributing fossil fuels, along with comprehensive, airtight planningcan accomplish what is required at this emergency juncture. Everybody knows this, Malm writes. Few say it. And so, speed being paramount (Delay is fatal, as Lenin said), Malms ecological Leninism leaps at any opportunity to wrest the state in this direction, break with business-as-usual as sharply as required and subject the regions of the economy working towards catastrophe to direct public control.
But Malm goes further, wisely or not, suggesting that even something like war communism may be necessary, invoking the nascent Bolshevik regimes desperate and brutal measures during its struggle to survive the Russian Civil War. Malm, of course, is far from the first to call for something resembling wartime mobilization to address the climate emergency, but the term war communism, he admits, tends to leave an acid taste. Rightly so. (His use of it, hes quick to add, is not to suggest that we should have summary executions, send food detachments into the countryside or militarize labor, just as no one who looks at World War II as a model for climate mobilization wants to drop another atomic bomb on Hiroshima.) What Malm is calling for here is not ruthless, unrestrained state power, but an emergency power thats democratically and ethically grounded. He is quite ready to throw out those parts of the Marxist-Leninist playbook that are ripe (or overripe) for their own obituaries.
Not least among those is the doctrine that prescribes first demolishing the capitalist state and replacing it with a socialist one. The capitalist state is all we have in the near termand with climate, the near term is what matters. No workers state based on soviets will be miraculously born in the night, Malm writes. Waiting for it would be both delusional and criminal.
What Malm is calling for here is not ruthless, unrestrained state power, but an emergency power thats democratically and ethically grounded.
Whats more, as Malm is well aware, given the current state of our politics there is no reason to assume that any revolutionary rupture will come from the left or result in a left-wing government; if anything, theres more reason to fear a neo-fascist takeover than any sort of totalitarian left. (Malm has explored the intersection of climate and the fascist threat in depth, in his 2021 book with the Zetkin Collective,White Skin, Black Fuel: On the Danger of Fossil Fascism.) Its possible that from now on, any viable left will have to resemble a Popular Front anti-fascist coalition: the fight against fascism and the fight against fossil capitalbeing one and the same.
But Malm makes clear that his ecological Leninism is a conceptual framework, a set of principles, not marching orders. Nor does it imply, he goes on, that there are any actual Leninist formations capable of seizing power and implementing the correct measures. To the contrary, The crisis is the absencethe complete, gaping absenceof any leadership. And so the dreary bourgeois state will have to be forced, more or less as it is, through popular uprising and a diversity of tactics (including mass sabotage), to save itself. Then, at least, a reborn revolutionary left may live to fight another day.
However unlikely to be realized Malms vision may be, and he knows that it appears very unlikely, those elements of the climate movement and the left that pretend that none of this needs to happen . . . are not being honest, he writes. This is undoubtedly true. Somebody had to say it.
Every concrete measure proposed here, Malm concludes, may well be brushed aside as utopian. They are exactly as utopian as survival.
A year or two ago, around the time Malms How to Blow Up a Pipeline was belatedly discovered by the mainstream press, I was asked by a reporter for a major newspaper, off the record, just how far Id be willing to go as a climate-justice activist in the struggle against the fossil-fuel industry and its political backers. I told him, speaking as one who has supported and engaged in escalated, nonviolent direct action for more than a decade, that I honestly didnt know. (And if I did know, I probably wouldnt tell a reporter, on or off the record.) Truth is, I still dont. But its a good questionand not only for a climate activist but for anyone involved in left politics now.
The answer no doubt depends upon how you understand the present momentwhether youve really taken on board, not only rationally but viscerally, based on the prevailing scientific and political realities, just how desperate the human situation on this planet really is, especially for the vast majority of people whove done little or nothing to cause the catastrophe. After thirty-plus years of failure on climate policy by the Global North, with global greenhouse emissions still at record levels, surely any informed and decent person living in one of the worlds most historically culpable countries will be moved to ask what can and must be done to at least reduce the suffering and salvage a livable future, one with the possibility of social justice.
The risks to revolutionists are, indeed, enormous. But the alternativeclimate breakdown plus fascism, genocide, in short, barbarismis intolerable.
Chances are, though, even if you identify as a socialist of some sort, the option of engaging in a revolutionary-left political movement wont cross your mind. Maybe youd prefer, if you can afford it, to go shopping instead: buy an EV, an electric heat pump, some solar panels for your roof. Too bourgeois? Then perhaps switch to a plant-based diet; attend a protest; canvass for a political candidate;maybe even get arrested. And post about all of it on social media. All good and worthwhile things. But to actually try to help bring about the urgent and necessary radical break with the political and economic system thats driving the destruction? In a country crawling with heavily armed right-wing militants and a militarized police/surveillance state itching to use its latest toys? What kind of fool do you think I am?
At this point, one might reasonably ask: If any serious revolutionary-left politics has been all but dead for at least a generation or two, and if theres no sign on the horizon of a movement capable of taking power and forcing the radical shift requiredif even mere Bernie Sanders-style political revolution appears far-fetched at presentwhat is the point of talking about any of this? Why bother?
In fact, one might just as well ask what is the point, at this late hour, of talking about any alternative political, social, or ecological visionof any hope that a better world, even a salvaged one, is still possiblewithout taking seriously the urgent necessity of a radical rupture with business-and-politics as usual. For the climate movement and the broader left to settle for anything less than mere political revolutionto resign ourselves to head-in-sand incrementalism while dreaming of an abundant green socialismis to settle for a global ecocide amounting to genocide for large parts of humanity, primarily in the Global South but not only there; the North will not be spared.
If this is the case, then it would seem that the task for those of us who refuse to settle, and who choose to engage, is to urgently shift our social movements, in broad solidarity and coalition, toward the making or remaking of a revolutionary left politics. This means building a movement of movements, as many of us have insisted for years, committed to rupture, ready to take power democratically, and ready to use it effectively.
This, in turn, means building a movement culture of risk-taking, both personal and collective; of sacrifice, when necessary; and of resolve, once committed, to stay in the fight.
And the risks are, indeed, enormous. But the alternativeclimate breakdown plus fascism, genocide, in short, barbarismis intolerable. Business-, politics-, and activism-as-usual are already catastrophic. Continuing on the current path is the greatest risk of all. There are, in fact, no safe options. (No one knows this better than climate-justice activists Jessica Reznicek and Ruby Montoya, who were sentenced to eight and six years in prison, respectively, for their sabotage of the Dakota Access Pipeline in 2016-2017.)
As Im sure Malm would admit, its possible that literally blowing up pipelines will not turn out to be the wisest of tactics. Deliberately spiking oil prices (as Goldhabers fictional saboteurs aim to do), placing an economic burden on poor and working-class people, is probably not the way to build bottom-up power. Then again, who am I to say?
What we can say, as any seasoned movement strategist knowsand as Goldhabers film seems to forgetis that a revolutionary act, no matter how spectacular, does not a revolutionary movement make. Revolutionary tactics do not, of themselves, amount to a revolutionary politics. Only movements are capable of revolution.
But Im with Malm in the assessment that the willingness to take large risksincluding the willingness to break things, in particular the things that are breaking the very biospherewould seem a minimum requirement for any revolutionary-left movement worthy of the name. That is, any movement that takes seriously not only human survival but human solidaritythat most utopian of endsfor which many in history, let us never forget, have risked and given everything. And for which some of us, it may yet be discovered, still will.
Read the original:
Risk and Revolution | Wen Stephenson - The Baffler
- This weeks top comments from Tampabay.com include Cold-War communism and ACA benefits. - Tampa Bay Times - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Trump in Miami: We have a choice between Communism and Common Sense - The Pavlovic Today - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Trump says New Yorkers will seek refuge from communism in Miami - The Business Journals - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- In memory of the millions lost to Communism - The Institute Of Public Affairs - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- 19 People From Former Soviet Republics Are Sharing What Others "Just Don't Get" About Communism - BuzzFeed - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- 35 years later/ Why the monstrous crimes of communism in Albania were never punished - cna.al - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
- The Pope gives the green light to 11 new blessed individuals killed under Nazism and Communism - Rome Reports - October 30th, 2025 [October 30th, 2025]
- Pope gives true light to the beatification of 11 martyrs of Nazism and Communism - omnesmag.com - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
- Are communism and socialism the same? - MinnPost - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Pope approves beatification for priests martyred under Nazism and Communism - Vatican News - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Analyst: World Split Between Communism and FreedomUS Only Now Waking Up - NTD News - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Pope Leo XIV authorizes beatification of 20th-century martyrs of Nazism and Communism - CatholicVote org - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Does communism have a future in India? - Scroll.in - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Trump Jr. says Mamdani victory may be needed to stop disease of communism in US - Washington Examiner - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
- Letter to the editor: Communism attracts followers by stoking greed - Washington Times - October 21st, 2025 [October 21st, 2025]
- Building the forces of Communism donate to the Revolutionary Communist Party today! - Revolutionary Communist Party - October 19th, 2025 [October 19th, 2025]
- From The Hindu, October 17, 1925: The war on communism - The Hindu - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
- Bill Maher says Trump is a success and slams young people embracing communism - Washington Examiner - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
- Beyond Post-Communism: Imagining the Future in Times of Transition - Universiteit Leiden - October 13th, 2025 [October 13th, 2025]
- Freshers success for the RCP: Students turn to communism for real answers - Revolutionary Communist Party - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
- Will Communism Win In NYC? - AM 870 The ANSWER - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
- Ivan Klima, author whose work depicted the tribulations of life and love under communism obituary - The Telegraph - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
- Americas Young Communists Really Believe True Communism Has Never Been Tried - National Review - September 30th, 2025 [September 30th, 2025]
- Soviet communism was not more successful at reducing inequality than other regimes - CEPR - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- Communism surges in the US due to the brainwashing on the left [letter] - LancasterOnline - September 28th, 2025 [September 28th, 2025]
- The New Deal and Its Clash With Communism - MSN - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- Will Anarchism Face the Same Fate as Communism in Indonesia? - Magdalene.co - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- Germanys forgotten sportscar was a triumph over Communism - drive.com.au - September 19th, 2025 [September 19th, 2025]
- Thirty Years After Communism: Eastern Europes EU Integration vs. the Alternative - veridica.ro - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
- Shades Of Communism: Effort To Destroy The Lives Of People For Comments About The Killing Of Charlie Kirk OpEd - Eurasia Review - September 15th, 2025 [September 15th, 2025]
- Soviet Communism was no more successful at reducing inequality than other regimes - The London School of Economics and Political Science - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
- How a Century of Anti-Communism Cleared the Way for Trumps Authoritarianism - Truthout - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
- Rodion Shchedrin, wide-ranging Russian composer who deftly navigated the eras of Communism and of Putin - yahoo.com - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
- New Thriller Set During the Late 1980's Amongst the Fall of Communism Details the Planned Kidnapping of a Young Gifted Boy - PR Newswire - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
- Berlin's memorial to victims of communism 'long overdue' - DW - August 24th, 2025 [August 24th, 2025]
- Communism crushed cotton candy business, but family revives it in America - Illinois Policy - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
- Animal Farm at 80: Why the animals really matter in Orwells parable about communism - BusinessWorld - BusinessWorld Online - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
- Under Health Communism, Care is a Human Right - In These Times - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
- MORGAN: The horrors of communism are being forgotten - Western Standard - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
- Animal Farm at 80: why the animals really matter in Orwells parable about communism - The Conversation - August 16th, 2025 [August 16th, 2025]
- Ask The Communist: Are religion and communism completely incompatible? - Revolutionary Communist Party - August 14th, 2025 [August 14th, 2025]
- The Winter Soldier who fled from communism will be Frankenstein - mundoamerica.com - August 12th, 2025 [August 12th, 2025]
- The Fatal Assumption at the Heart of Communism - National Catholic Register - August 9th, 2025 [August 9th, 2025]
- Ion Iliescu, who led Romania after the fall of communism, dies at 95 - The Washington Post - August 9th, 2025 [August 9th, 2025]
- In despair, the young are turning towards communism - The Times - August 7th, 2025 [August 7th, 2025]
- Ion Iliescu, who led Romania after the fall of communism, dies at 95 - MSN - August 7th, 2025 [August 7th, 2025]
- LETTER: Democrats are headed toward Communism - yoursun.com - August 7th, 2025 [August 7th, 2025]
- The reason Leonard Bernstein was accused of communism - Far Out Magazine - August 3rd, 2025 [August 3rd, 2025]
- For an Ecommunist Alternative to Degrowth and "Luxury" Communism - Left Voice - August 1st, 2025 [August 1st, 2025]
- How Orwells 1984 helped end Communism and why its being banned in America today - Moneycontrol - July 28th, 2025 [July 28th, 2025]
- Countries where communism is banned or restricted - MSN - July 24th, 2025 [July 24th, 2025]
- For an Eco-Communist Alternative to Degrowth and Luxury Communism - Socialist Project - July 24th, 2025 [July 24th, 2025]
- They brought a symbol of Cold War communism to the Triangle and made it run again - Raleigh News & Observer - July 16th, 2025 [July 16th, 2025]
- Ep. 1103 New Epstein Questions About Missing Minute, and Mamdanis Communism and College Controversy - Megyn Kelly The Devil May Care - July 14th, 2025 [July 14th, 2025]
- Zohran Mamdani Has a Disgusting Personality Flaw That's Even Worse Than Loving Communism and Hamas - freebeacon.com - July 10th, 2025 [July 10th, 2025]
- Communism Meets Reincarnation? How China Is Trying To Pick The Next Dalai Lama - Worldcrunch - July 4th, 2025 [July 4th, 2025]
- The Secret Committee That Persecuted Black and Gay People In the Name of Fighting Communism - CrimeReads - July 4th, 2025 [July 4th, 2025]
- Communism For New York Grocery Stores - AM 870 The ANSWER - July 2nd, 2025 [July 2nd, 2025]
- Christianity, Islam and communism and the global conquest - The Hans India - June 29th, 2025 [June 29th, 2025]
- New York turns to full-blown Communism - Schiff Sovereign - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- Trkiye's answer to Disco Elysium just broke cover, featuring more lawyers, fewer cops, an indeterminate amount of communism and twin fistfuls of guilt... - June 28th, 2025 [June 28th, 2025]
- A Cuban woman surprises the President of Madrid in Miami: I am here because of communism. - CiberCuba - June 24th, 2025 [June 24th, 2025]
- The essence of revolutionary communism: new introduction to the 'Classics of Marxism' - In Defence of Marxism - June 22nd, 2025 [June 22nd, 2025]
- Elicer vila and Destino exchange fire on social media: "Those of us who fled communism value the freedom of the U.S." - CiberCuba - June 22nd, 2025 [June 22nd, 2025]
- The progressive "West" and the ghost of monarchy - In Defense of Communism - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- 39th Congress of the Communist Party of Sweden (SKP): Statements on Palestine and the Ukraine War - In Defense of Communism - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- First Nations are mired in 'soft communism.' This leader has the fix - National Post - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Reactions by Communist Parties on Israel-Iran War - In Defense of Communism - June 20th, 2025 [June 20th, 2025]
- Czech Blog: Wine and War A Glimpse Into the Legacies of Communism - Global Atlanta - June 14th, 2025 [June 14th, 2025]
- Communist Party of Israel and Hadash stand against Netanyahu government's attack on Iran - In Defense of Communism - June 14th, 2025 [June 14th, 2025]
- Anticommunism in Kyrgyzstan: The world's largest monument dedicated to Lenin to be dismantled - In Defense of Communism - June 10th, 2025 [June 10th, 2025]
- Communism Survivor on Revoking Chinese Student Visas: Beware the Enemy Within - NTD News - June 1st, 2025 [June 1st, 2025]
- The specter of communism still looms over the Balkans - The Spectator Australia - June 1st, 2025 [June 1st, 2025]
- Campus Communism: How the CCP Compromised Harvard and US Higher Education - Hudson Institute - May 30th, 2025 [May 30th, 2025]
- How the Portuguese Communist Party assesses the negative electoral result of 18 May - In Defense of Communism - May 30th, 2025 [May 30th, 2025]
- The shadow of communism still looms over the Balkans - The Spectator - May 30th, 2025 [May 30th, 2025]
- Texas House Advances Bill Requiring Schools to Teach History and 'Atrocities' of Communism - The Texan - May 24th, 2025 [May 24th, 2025]
- Bill teaching children dangers of communism passed in the Texas House - Washington Examiner - May 24th, 2025 [May 24th, 2025]
- Communists in Greece block trucks with ammunition heading to Ukraine - In Defense of Communism - May 24th, 2025 [May 24th, 2025]
- Communist Party of India (Marxist) condemns the killing of 27 Maoists by state forces in Chhattisgarh - In Defense of Communism - May 24th, 2025 [May 24th, 2025]