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Terms: Indian

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  • File Name: Lenin/SCCI20.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Second Congress of the Communist International
  • 1 Occurence(s) of the search term IndianDescription:
        The imperialist war has helped the revolution: from the colonies, the backward countries, and the isolation they lived in, the bourgeoisie levied soldiers for this imperialist war. The British bourgeoisie impressed on the soldiers from India that it was the duty of the Indian peasants to defend Great Britain against Germany; the French bourgeoisie impressed on soldiers from the French colonies that it was their duty to defend France. They taught them the use of arms, a very useful thing, for which we might express our deep gratitude to the bourgeoisie -- express our gratitude on behalf of all the Russian workers and peasants, and particularly on behalf of all the Russian Red Army

  • File Name: Lenin/SD16.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: The Discussion of Self-Determination Summed Up
  • 1 Occurence(s) of the search term IndianDescription:
    In the colonies there have been a number of attempts at rebellion, which the oppressor nations, naturally did all they could to hide by means of a military censorship. Nevertheless, it is known that in Singapore the British brutally suppressed a mutiny among their Indian troops; that there were attempts at rebellion in French Annam (see Nashe Slovo) and in the German Cameroons (see the Junius pamphlet[*]); that in Europe, on the one hand, there was a rebellion in Ireland, which the "freedom-loving" English, who did not dare to extend conscription to Ireland, suppressed by executions, and, on the other, the Austrian Government passed the death sentence on the deputies of the Czech Diet "for treason", and shot whole Czech regiments for the same "crime".     This list is, of course, far from complete

  • File Name: Lenin/SRSD16.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Socialist Revolution and Self-Determination
  • 1 Occurence(s) of the search term IndianDescription:
    Secondly, even the one example of the secession of Norway from Sweden in 1905 is sufficient to refute "impracticability" in that sense. Thirdly, it would be absurd to deny that some slight change in the political and strategic relations of, say, Germany and Britain, might today or tomorrow make the formation of a new Polish, Indian and other similar state fully "practicable". Fourthly, finance capital, in its drive to expand, can "freely" buy or bribe the freest page 145 democratic or republican government and the elective officials of any, even an "independent", country

  • File Name: Lenin/UC00.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Uncritical Criticism
  • 1 Occurence(s) of the search term IndianDescription:
    " In this "attempt at irony" the critic reveals his failure to understand the elementary difference between division of labour in society and division of labour in the workshop: the former creates (under commodity production -- a condition which I definitely specified, so that Mr. Skvortsov's reminder about the division of labour in the Indian village community relates to that author's deplorable weakness for quoting irrelevant passages from Marx) isolated commodity-producers, who, independently and separately from one another, produce different products which enter into exchange; the latter does not alter the relation of the producers to society, but merely transforms their position in the workshop. That is the reason, so far as I can judge, why Marx sometimes speaks of "social division of labour"* and at others simply     * In chapter twelve, volume one of Capital [in the English edition it is Chapter XIV

  • File Name: M&E/AD78ii.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: Anti-Dühring -- Political Economy
  • 3 Occurence(s) of the search term IndianDescription:
    Force was as little involved in this process as in the dividing up of the land held in common by the village communities (Gehöferschaften ) on the Moselle and in the Hochwald, which is still taking place today; the peasants simply find it to their advantage that the private ownership of land should take the place of common ownership. Even the formation of a primitive aristocracy, as in the case of the Celts, the Germans and the Indian Punjab, took place on the basis of common ownership of the land, and was not at first based in any way on force, page 207 but on voluntariness and custom. Wherever private property was instituted, it was the result of altered relations of production and exchange, in the interest of increased production and of the furtherance of trade -- hence as a result of economic causes


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