Title | The draft program of the Communist International |
Alternative Title | The draft program of the Communist International: a criticism of fundamentals |
Creator (LCNAF) |
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Contributor (LCNAF) |
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Publisher | "The Militant" |
Place of Creation (TGN) |
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Date | 1929 |
Subject.Topical (Local) |
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Subject.Name (LCNAF) |
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Subject.Geographic (TGN) |
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Genre (AAT) |
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Language | English |
Type (DCMI) |
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Original Item Extent | 139 pages; 20 cm |
Original Item Location | HX11.I5T73 |
Original Item URL | http://library.uh.edu/record=b8304416~S5 |
Original Collection | Socialist and Communist Pamphlets |
Digital Collection | Socialist and Communist Pamphlets |
Digital Collection URL | http://digital.lib.uh.edu/collection/scpamp |
Repository | Special Collections, University of Houston Libraries |
Repository URL | http://libraries.uh.edu/branches/special-collections |
Use and Reproduction | In Copyright: This item is protected by copyright. Copyright to this resource is held by the creator or current rights holder, and the resource is provided here for educational purposes. It may not be reproduced or distributed in any format without permission of the copyright owner. Users assume full responsibility for any infringement of copyright or related rights. |
File Name | index.cpd |
Title | Image 93 |
Format (IMT) |
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File Name | uhlib_1984506_092.jpg |
Transcript | THE COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL 79 class structure of a nation waging the revolutionary struggle; the historical epoch in which that struggle develops; the degree of economic, political and military dependence of the national bourgeoisie upon world imperialism in its entirety or upon one of its parts; and, finally, which is the most important, the degree of class activity oi the native proletariat and the state of its connections with the international revolutionary movement. The democratic or national liberation revolution may promise the bourgeoisie an opportunity to deepen and broaden its chance for exploitation. Independent action of the proletariat on the revolutionary arena threatens to deprive the bourgeoisie of the possibility to exploit altogether. Let us look at some facts. The present inspirers of the Comintern have untiringly repeated that Chiang Kai-shek waged a war "against imperialism" whilst Kerensky marched hand in hand with the imperialists and that hence it was necessary to wage an irreconciliable struggle against Kerensky, while it was necessary to support Chiang Kai-shek. Kerensky's relations with imperialism cannot be disputed. One can go even still further back and point out that the Russian bourgeoisie "overthrew" Nicholas II with the sanction of the British and French imperialism. Not only Miliukov and Kerensky supported the war waged by Lloyd George and IPoincare, but Lloyd George and Poincare sup- Ported Miliukov's and Kerensky's revolution against the czar, and later against the workers and I Peasants. Of this there can be absolutely no doubt. But how do matters stand in this connection in China? The "February" revolution in China took J Place in 1911. That revolution was a great and I Progressive event although it was accomplished |