Carlos Latuff, 2006 - 2009.
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#FreePalestine #GazaUnderAttack #WarCrimes #StandWithGaza #HumanRights
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π11
As Marxists we must not regard the crisis of power solely from the formal angle; we must look at it primarily from the class angle. The crisis of power is a tense and open struggle of classes for power.
J. V. Stalin
Speeches Delivered at an Emergency Conference of the Petrograd Organization of the R.S.D.L.P. (Bolsheviks)
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J. V. Stalin
Speeches Delivered at an Emergency Conference of the Petrograd Organization of the R.S.D.L.P. (Bolsheviks)
#Stalin #Speech #Bolshevik #Marxist
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π₯12π1
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On this day in 1968, US Olympic athletes John Carlos and Tommie Smith made the Black Power salute at the medal ceremony in Mexico.
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The athletes were protesting the ongoing racial injustice in the US. They wore a black glove to represent Black power, socks instead of shoes to represent poverty, and a black scarf around the neck to symbolize the lynching of Black people.β
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The images were seen worldwide and became symbolic for the Black struggle for emancipation in the US that was heating up in the 60s. In their own country, they were criticized, attacked, and received death threats.β They were suspended from the Olympic team and immediately sent home.
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Regarding all the difficulties he endured, Carlos said: βI have no regrets. The people who have regrets are the ones who were there in 1968 and did nothing.β
theredstream
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β
The athletes were protesting the ongoing racial injustice in the US. They wore a black glove to represent Black power, socks instead of shoes to represent poverty, and a black scarf around the neck to symbolize the lynching of Black people.β
β
The images were seen worldwide and became symbolic for the Black struggle for emancipation in the US that was heating up in the 60s. In their own country, they were criticized, attacked, and received death threats.β They were suspended from the Olympic team and immediately sent home.
β
Regarding all the difficulties he endured, Carlos said: βI have no regrets. The people who have regrets are the ones who were there in 1968 and did nothing.β
theredstream
#BlackPower #1968Olympics #JohnCarlos #TommieSmith #RacialJustice #BlackHistory #Protest #CivilRights #BlackStruggle #OlympicProtest #HumanRights #OnThisDay
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π₯7
John Reed ten-days-that-shook-the-world.pdf
4.6 MB
Ten Days That Shook the World
John Reed
First published by Boni & Liveright, New York, 1919
With the greatest interest and with never slackening attention I read John Reedβs book, Ten Days that Shook the World.
Unreservedly do I recommend it to the workers of the world.
Here is a book which I should like to see published in millions of copies and translated into all languages.
It gives a truthful and most vivid exposition of the events so significant to the comprehension of what really is the Proletarian Revolution and the Dictatorship of the Proletariat.
These problems are widely discussed, but before one can accept or reject these ideas, he must understand the full significance of his decision.
John Reedβs book will undoubtedly help to clear this question, which is the fundamental problem of the international labor movement.
Nikolai Lenin
(Vladimir Ilyitch Ulianov)
End of 1919
#TenDaysThatShookTheWorld #JohnReed #ProletarianRevolution #Lenin #DictatorshipOfTheProletariat #PDF #Book
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π₯7
People always have been and they always will be the stupid victims of deceit and self-deception in politics, until they learn behind every kind of moral, religious, political, social phrase, declaration and promise to seek out the interests of this or that class or classes. The partisans of reform and betterment will always be fooled by the defenders of the old rΓ©gime, until they understand that every old institution, no matter how savage and rotten it may seem, is sustained by the forces of this or that dominant class or classes. And there is only one way to break the resistance of these classes, namely, to find in the very society surrounding us, to find and educate and organize for the struggle, those forces which can β and owing to their social situation must β form a power capable of sweeping away the old and creating the new.
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#Lenin
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π₯8π1
The democratic petty bourgeois, far from desiring to overturn the whole of society for the revolutionary proletarian, strives for a change in social conditions which will make the existing society as endurable and comfortable as possible for him.
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#Marx
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π₯7
History Will Absolve Me! -- Fidel Castro's iconic speech, October 16, 1953
On October 16, 1953 Fidel Castro gave his iconic History Will Absolve Me speech before a Cuban court. He was on trial for his leading role in the attack on the Moncada Barracks in Santiago de Cuba on July 26, 1953 -- an event seen as the beginning of the Cuban Revolution that would culminate in the overthrow of the Batista dictatorship and the liberation of Cuba from imperialist domination in 1959.
The speech was two hours long and though a guilty verdict for Castro was preordained, it became a manifesto and rallying cry of the revolutionary 26th of July Movement. Copies of it were secretly printed and distributed.
Castro was convicted and sentenced to 15 years in prison though he was released in 1955 due a general amnesty.
Critical parts of the speech included Castro's proclamation of the "five revolutionary laws" as well as his long and brilliant defense of the people's right to rebel against -- including in armed uprisings -- tyranny and oppression citing, among other examples, the American Revolution and Cuba's own constitution at the time.
You can read the full speech at:
It culminated with the immortal line "Condemn me. It does not matter. History will absolve me."
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On October 16, 1953 Fidel Castro gave his iconic History Will Absolve Me speech before a Cuban court. He was on trial for his leading role in the attack on the Moncada Barracks in Santiago de Cuba on July 26, 1953 -- an event seen as the beginning of the Cuban Revolution that would culminate in the overthrow of the Batista dictatorship and the liberation of Cuba from imperialist domination in 1959.
The speech was two hours long and though a guilty verdict for Castro was preordained, it became a manifesto and rallying cry of the revolutionary 26th of July Movement. Copies of it were secretly printed and distributed.
Castro was convicted and sentenced to 15 years in prison though he was released in 1955 due a general amnesty.
Critical parts of the speech included Castro's proclamation of the "five revolutionary laws" as well as his long and brilliant defense of the people's right to rebel against -- including in armed uprisings -- tyranny and oppression citing, among other examples, the American Revolution and Cuba's own constitution at the time.
You can read the full speech at:
https://www.marxists.org/history/cuba/archive/castro/1953/10/16.htm
It culminated with the immortal line "Condemn me. It does not matter. History will absolve me."
#Cuba #FidelCastro #Castro
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π₯9β€1
An aspiring engineering designer Chinese Young Pioneer constructs a mechanical aircraft model at a Pioneer summer camp, People's Republic of #China, 1951
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π₯10
Leninism Lives!, #Lenin Centennial #Poster, #France 1970
Poster from the French Communist Party in honour of the centenary of Lenin's birth. It says "Leninism Lives" as well as "For an Advanced Democracy and a Socialist France".
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Poster from the French Communist Party in honour of the centenary of Lenin's birth. It says "Leninism Lives" as well as "For an Advanced Democracy and a Socialist France".
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π₯6β€1