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File Name:
OI06.html
Modified:
20 August 2002
Title:
Marx and Engels on Insurrection
4 Occurence(s)
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Party
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In all, twenty numbers were issue. [p.244] [67] This passage is quoted from an article by V. I. Lenin entitled "The Present Situation in Russia and the Tactics of the Workers'
Party
" (see Works, 4th Rus.ed., Vo
File Name:
OMC17.html
Modified:
20 August 2002
Title:
Outcome of the Moscow Conference
1 Occurence(s)
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Party
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    The Cadets are rubbing their hands with satisfactio."The
Party
of Popular Freedom," they say, "can pride itself on the fact that its slogans . . . have been recognize.. . as the national slogans" (Rech ).     The defencists are also pleased, for they talk of "the triumph of the democracy" (read: the defencists!), and assert that "the democracy emerges from the Moscow Conference strengthened" (Izvestia ).     "Bolshevism must be destroyed," said Milyukov at the conference amid the loud applause of the representatives of the "virile force
File Name:
OR24.html
Modified:
20 August 2002
Title:
October Revolution and Tactics of the Communists
44 Occurence(s)
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Party
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    Secondly, it enjoyed the undoubted support of the poor peasants and of the majority of the soldiers, who were thirsting for peace and lan.     Thirdly, it had at its head, as its guiding force, such a tried and tested
Party
as the Bolshevik
Party
, strong not only by page 119 reason of its experience and discipline acquired through the years, but also by reason of its vast connections with the labouring masse.     Fourthly, the October Revolution was confronted by enemies who were comparatively easy to overcome, such as the rather weak Russian bourgeoisie, a landlord class which was utterly demoralized by peasant "revolts," and the compromising parties (the Mensheviks and Socialist-Revolutionaries), which had become completely bankrupt during the wa
File Name:
ORN13.html
Modified:
20 August 2002
Title:
On the Road to Nationalism
12 Occurence(s)
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Party
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295-99. Prepared © for the Internet by David J. Romagnolo, djr@marx2mao.org (July 2001) page 295 ON THE ROAD TO NATIONALISM (A Letter From the Caucasus)     Among the decisions which will perpetuate the glory of the Liquidators' conference, the decision on "cultural national autonomy" occupies by no means the last plac.     Here it is:     "Having heard the communication of the Caucasian delegation to the effect that at the last conference of the Caucasian organisations of the R.S.D.L.P., as well as in the literary organs of these organisations, the Caucasian comrades expressed the opinion that it is necessary to demand national-cultural autonomy, this conference, while expressing no opinion on the merits of this demand, declares that such an interpretation of the clause of the
Party
programme which recognises the right of every nationality to self-determination does not contradict the precise meaning of the programme, and it expresses the wish that the national question be put on the agenda of the next congress of the R.S.D.L.P."     This resolution is important not only because it expresses the Liquidators' opportunist shuffling in face of the rising nationalist tid.It is also important because every phrase in it is a ge
File Name:
ORQMS23.html
Modified:
20 August 2002
Title:
October Revolution and the Question of Middle Strata
2 Occurence(s)
of the search term
Party
Description:
    It is noteworthy that Marx himself had an entirely different appraisal of the middle strata, especially of page 351 the peasantr.Whereas the vulgar Marxists, washing their hands of the peasantry and leaving it entirely at the political disposal of capital, noisily bragged about their "firm principles," Marx, the most true to principle of all Marxists, persistently advised the Communist
Party
not to lose sight of the peasantry, to win it over to the side of the proletariat and to make sure of its support in the future proletarian revolutio.We know that in the 'fifties, after the defeat of the February Revolution in France and in Germany, Marx wrote to Engels, and through him to the Communist Party of Germany:     "The whole thing in Germany will depend on the possibility of backing the proletarian revolution by some second edition of the Peasant War."[79]     That was written about the Germany of the 'fifties, a peasant country, where the proletariat comprised a small minority, where the proletariat was less organised than the proletariat was in Russia in 1917, and where the peasantry, owing to its position, was less disposed to support a proletarian revolution than the peasantry in Russia in 1917.     The October Revolution undoubtedly represented that happy combination of a "peasant war" and a "proletarian revolution" of which Marx wrote, despite all the "highly principled" chatterboxe
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