Vladimir I. Lenin: Left-Wing Communism, an Infantile Disorder
Bob Avakian: Marxism and the Call of the Future: Conversations on Ethics, History, and Politics
Ron Jacobs: The Way the Wind Blew: A History of the Weather Underground
Michael Denning: Cultural Front: The Laboring of American Culture in the 20th Century
Robin D. G. Kelley: Hammer & Hoe: Alabama Communists During the Great Depression
Dan Georgakas: Detroit: I Do Mind Dying : A Study in Urban Revolution
Esther Kaplan: With God on Their Side: George W. Bush and the Christian Right
Richard Gott: Hugo Chavez: The Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela
V.I. Lenin: Essential Works of Lenin: "What is to Be Done?" & Other Writings
War At Home: Covert Action Against U.S. Activists and What We Can Do About It
Ashwin Desai: We Are the Poors: Community Struggles in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Malcolm X: Malcolm X Speaks: Selected Speeches and Statements
Arthur I. Miller: Einstein, Picasso: Space, Time, and the Beauty That Causes Havoc
Revolution -- Why It's Necessary, Why It's Possible, What It's All About
John Bellamy Foster: Pox Americana: Exposing the American Empire
Stan Goff: Full Spectrum Disorder: The Military in the New American Century
Bob Avakian: My Journey from Mainstream America to Revolutionary Communist
Slavoj Zizek: Revolution at the Gates: Lenin's 1917 Writings
William Hinton: Fanshen: A Documentary of Revolution in a Chinese Village
[Thus far my favorite critical piece on events in Venezuela. For a surprisingly robust, open and religious(!) exploration of the same theme, check out this speech by the outgoing Defense Minister... a long time friend of Hugo. — JB]
by Bromma
from threewayfight
Hugo Chavez, President of Venezuela, recently announced the arrival of XXIst Century Socialism. This declaration, although greeted with great enthusiasm, left a residue of confusion. Since Chavez didn't discuss XXIst Century Socialism during his recent Presidential campaign, and since there are virtually no public theoretical documents defining this new Socialist era, its precise features are not always clear.
Fortunately, Chavez has appointed a committee, well stocked with international supporters, to come up with appropriate explanatory documents. In the meantime, we can best understand the contours of XXIst Century Socialism by examining it as it actually functions in the real world. Practice is the true test of theory; after several years of Chavez's leadership, we can readily detect the broad outlines of this innovative Socialism.
There appear to be several critical new features of the new XXIst Century Socialist breakthrough. We will review some of the most important:
First of all, XXIst Century Socialism does not require a revolution. This comes as a great relief to Socialists around the world, and will surely encourage many new Socialists to step forward.
For anyone curious about why Hugo Chavez has taken the broadcast license from RCTV, here's a documentary that somehow never aired on our "free press", The Revolution Will Not Be Televised. If you haven't seen it yet, it's not only an open-and-shut case on the active, pre-meditated and grotesque collaboration of RCTV (and the Globovision news channel) in the failed military coup against Chavez, but a riveting inside story of the polarization gripping Venezuela. I also just found an interesting story at Znet on the rise of a co-op economy, one of many signs that the changes instituted by the Bolivarians aren't just rhetorical. One man (or family or privately held corporation) has no right to control the information commons, I'd say that on general principle – but when a pack of oligarchs openly conspires to impose a fascist dictatorship over the wishes of the people, by what right can they claim access to the people's airwaves?
Received from the National Hip Hop Political Convention:
After
Hurricane Katrina ripped through New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf
Coast and uprooted the lives of more than a million, predominantly
Black and working class people, Venezuela, under the leadership of
President Hugo Chavez, was one of the first nations to offer
humanitarian aid to the United States government and all those
displaced.
The
US government, under the leadership of George W. Bush, rejected
Venezuela’s offer and closed a venue of life saving support sorely
needed by the Black and working class Survivors of Hurricane Katrina.
Why? The answer lies with the racist and imperialist structure and
worldview of the US government. It is this structure and worldview that
left Black people to die in New Orleans after the great flood and
deliberately attacked them, scattered them, and abandoned them without
aid or humanitarian protection. It is this same system and worldview
that has repeatedly sought to disrupt and undermine the democratic
process in Venezuela and threatened to assassinate its President.
Continue reading "From New Orleans to Caracas: The Mutual Aid & Intl. Solidarity Conference" »
An ad hoc network of activists in New York has taken up the Zapatista call for a day of actions in solidarity with the popular struggle in Oaxaca on Friday, December 22. Organizations, collectives and individuals are encouraged to plan autonomous actions, and to join gatherings at the Mexican consulate and later at Rockefeller Center (remember Diego Rivera!).
Download Oaxaca/NYC Solidarity Flyer
For more information, check:
El Enemigo Comun
Friends of Brad Will
Or for background on the conflict and the voice of the people themselves, check the website of the Popular Assembly of Oaxaca (APPO)
Augosto Pinochet died yesterday, despised by the people of Chile and the world for his trail of torture, repression and service to capitalism as military dictator.
Lesson #1: All dictators die, but they don't take class dictatorship with them.
Lesson #2: The state is not neutral. When the popular front leader Salvador Allende was elected president of Chile (in the prototype of a "peaceful revolution,") Pinochet was the tool for a US-engineered coup d'etat on September 11, 1973. Allende was more afraid of the people than he was of the military, and by refusing to arm the workers of Chile – they were left defenseless when the terror came. Allende was among the first to die, but thousands were killed, mutilated, raped and disappeared in the coming years. The best of the generation were cut down or driven into exile. It was a blow that the revolutionary movements of the Southern Cone have yet to overcome.
Without state power, all is illusion. Without a people's army, the people have nothing.

"It is not, contrary to what it might appear to be, a photograph from
a scene from a Marx Brothers film. It is, rather, the true history of
yesterday’s session of the Mexican National Congress, the distinguished
hall in Mexico City where, on Friday, according to the Constitution of
the Republic, Felipe Calderón must take the oath of office and put on
the presidential sash in order to legalize his status as the nation’s
top executive.
Not all the members of that esteemed lawmaking body are in agreement that Calderón was elected to the presidency last July 2" [photo: DR2006, La Jornada]
The Coup d'Etat in Mexico:
As a new regime prepares to seize control Dec. 1, proming a new wave of repression, the antidote is being born from below... A report by Al Giordano of Narco News
PFP expanding operations to towns surrounding Oaxaca City: The Federal Preventative Police is expanding its operations, deaths and dissapearances mount.
Mexico: A Powder Keg: On the walls of La Realidad, the base-village of the Zapatista movement deep in the Lacandona jungle, the paintings of Emilio Zapata, Che Guevara and Subcommandante Marcos have faded over the last three years.
Mexican government squash the popular movement in Oaxaca [es]: Human rights repression in Oaxaca
Killing in Oaxaca, a dispatch from a friend's daughter: This day will go down in local history as the most intense fighting of the movement so far. Perhaps it will go down in national history as a battle of the revolution.
| This film provides a sympathetic look at the Peruvian revolution and the Communist Party of Peru (Shining Path) before Presidente Gonzalo's capture. The situation is now, very much, different. It was produced by the British TV station Channel 4. Most notable is how it actually includes interviews with guerillas and communist political officers. Considering the tremendous efforts to totally demonize these brave fighters, at a time when most of the Latin American left was hanging it all up, anyone who hasn't seen this documentary might be more than a little surprised. This honest, in-depth documentary shows why revolutionaries who refused to lower their sights found inspiration from this great attempt in a time of near universal dispair. It also shows what can be done when you try.
Additional background reading: Gordon McCormick's comparitive study of the MRTA and the PCP, Sharp Dressed Man | On the link, A World to Win's current analysis of the "Peace Accords," with some discussion of ideological issues related to Guzman (Gonzolo), the PCP's currently fractured leadership and Guzman's theory of "jefetura", or placing the Party's leadership above internal democratic centralist practice: A Sober Look at the Situation of the Peru Revolution and Its Needs |
|
Interview by Hernán Ouviña
Translation by Chuck Morse
Flavio Sosa is a member of the “provisional collective council” of the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO, in Spanish). Despite being one of APPO’s most visible faces at the moment, he insists on stating that “ours is a movement of the grassroots, not leaders.” What follows are some fragments of a much longer conversation that we had with him and other comrades in the tent city in the emblematic Santo Domingo Plaza, a bastion of communalist resistance in Oaxaca.
Covering the ongoing popular uprising in Oaxaca, Mexico, NYC Indymedia journalist Brad Will was shot and killed at the Santa Lucia Barricade by paramilitaries repotedly linked to the besieged state governor's paramilitary forces. Several others were also shot and killed during the incident, including a schoolteacher associated with the militant teachers' union whose strike precipitated the political crisis on Mexico's southern Pacific Coast.
Brad Will was in Oaxaca to take video and report on the state-wide popular uprising and teacher strike that began in June with the violent attempted removal of the striking teachers from their encampment in the center of Oaxaca City by federal police forces. Since then, the teachers and other groups formed the APPO, the Popular Assembly of the Oaxacan People, and have called for the removal of the governor of state Ulises Ruiz of the PRI.
Brad Will is the first North American Indymedia journalist to be killed while reporting. There have been several other incidents where IMCs were targeted, and Lenin Cali Nájera, an Ecuadorian Indymedia activist, was killed in 2004.
Always skeptical, never the cynic; Brad Will was a committed anti-authoritarian who always sought to bring the stories of people in struggle to the whole world. An early volunteer with the Indymedia movement, his coverage of local struggles, such as the movement for public space and gardens in New York, were only one part of his internationalist vision. From the tree sits obstructing clear-cutting in the Pacific Northwest to the indigenous, proletarian uprisings of Bolivia, Brad was there to help people tell their own stories.
Brad Will died as he lived, on the barricades armed only with a video camera.
Read Brad's last communication from Oaxaca.
Adapted from reports on Indymedia by Jed Brandt. [photo by Erin Siegal]
RJ posted to NYC Indymedia:
The Zapatistas have declared a red alert! From now until May 8th, the Good Government Councils of the Zapatista communities are closed and the Mexican tour of Delegate Zero (SubC. Marcos) has been put on hold. For now, the words on the lips of every participant and supporter of the national anticapitalist initiative known as "the Other Campaign" are "We Are All Atenco!"
This is a call to organize actions at Mexican embassies and consulates throughout the world demanding an end to the attack on San Salvador Atenco and all repression against the Other Campaign!
Here in NYC, there will be a demonstration in front of the Mexican Consulate
(27 E. 39th St. between Madison and Park)
This Friday at 12:30!
This is one of those critical moments where visible solidarity will make a difference!
Continue reading "Actions to Defend the Zapatista "Other Campaign"" »