
Reposted from RS21, August 16, 2022.

A unity of opposites: The Dengist and the Red Guard

(Video) Ukraine: Revolutionaries at war

Stupidity, treason, or business as usual? The system is working in Russia

‘The canary in the coal mine’: Sri Lanka’s crisis is a chronicle foretold
Interview with Balasingham Skanthakumar by Eric Toussaint. Reposted from CADTM, August 7, 2022.

The Long Venezuelan Depression: A conversation with Malfred Gerig

Britain: Tory candidates push anti‑China cold war

The war on Ukraine: An interview with a Ukrainian socialist

Running aground: The Revolutionary Communist Party (US) and Stalinism
Emerging from the social upheavals of the 1960s, the Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP) counted many dedicated organizers in its ranks who were inspired by the ideas and the example of Maoist China. The party used Maoist theory not only to plan for a future socialist revolution, but also to grapple with the complicated history of Stalinism and its impact on the international communist movement and the USSR. While the RCP did confront some of the dogmas and myths of Marxist-Leninist orthodoxy, in the end they were unwilling and unable to effectively understand Stalinism.

Kautsky, Lenin, Stalin and revolutionary Russia

Statements: Free Walden Bello!

Before the 2014 war, Pavel Lisyansky, founder of the Eastern Human Rights Group, was a miner and trade union activist in the Donbas. If it were not for Russia’s aggression, he would still be working in the mines, he says. “This is my life,” is how he signed the photo from his personal archive accompanying this interview. Today, Pavel Lisyansky and his colleagues from the Eastern Human Rights Group (EHRG) founded in July 2014 in Debaltseve actively document and report on human rights violations in the Russian-occupied territories and help local residents facing lawlessness.