Our Politics Start with the WorldNew International, 2005 - 216 pages "Electrification is an elementary precondition if modern industry and cultural life are to develop, and classconscious workers fight for it to be extended to all the world's six billion people. This fight is a prime example of how proletarian politics, our politics, start with the world."--Jack Barnes The huge economic and cultural inequalities between imperialist and semicolonial countries, and among classes within almost every country, are produced, reproduced, and accentuated by the workings of capitalism. For vanguard workers to build parties able to lead a successful revolutionary struggle for power in our own countries, says Jack Barnes in the lead article, our activity must be guided by a strategy to close this gap. "We are part of an international class that has no homeland. That's not a slogan or a moral imperative. It is a recognition of the class reality of economic, social, and political life in the imperialist epoch." Also includes: Farming, Science, and the Working Classes by Steve Clark; Capitalism, Labor, and Nature: An Exchange, Richard Levins, Steve Clark. |
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Page 144
... soil ; all progress in increasing the fertility of the soil for a given time is a progress towards ruining the more long - lasting sources of that fertility .... Capitalist production , therefore , only develops the techniques and the ...
... soil ; all progress in increasing the fertility of the soil for a given time is a progress towards ruining the more long - lasting sources of that fertility .... Capitalist production , therefore , only develops the techniques and the ...
Page 170
... soil ero- sion , compaction , and salinization , reducing soil organic matter and nitrogen - fixing capacity , increasing the need for irrigation ; • increased vulnerability to pests and disease , requiring ever - bigger and more ...
... soil ero- sion , compaction , and salinization , reducing soil organic matter and nitrogen - fixing capacity , increasing the need for irrigation ; • increased vulnerability to pests and disease , requiring ever - bigger and more ...
Page 177
... soil from trac- tors and are able to work after heavy rains where tractors would only destroy the soil . The idea is not to replace mechanization but to combine it with animal use as ap- propriate . In my youth I farmed in the central ...
... soil from trac- tors and are able to work after heavy rains where tractors would only destroy the soil . The idea is not to replace mechanization but to combine it with animal use as ap- propriate . In my youth I farmed in the central ...
Table des matières
NUMBER | 5 |
by Jack Barnes | 11 |
EDITOR | 128 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
advance Africa agriculture alliance Asia battles Bolsheviks bourgeois campaign capi capitalism Capitalism's World Disorder capitalist century chemical class struggle communist movement continue course crops Cuba Cuba's Cuban Revolution culture decades defend economic electricity electrification Ernesto Che Guevara Europe exploitation farmers government FARRELL DOBBS fertilizers Fidel Castro fight forces genetically modified human imperialism imperialist countries industry International Jack Barnes join Karl Marx land leadership Leon Trotsky Levins Levins's Marx and Engels Marxist Mary-Alice Waters ment Militant million nuclear power oppressed organic farming Pathfinder percent pesticides population production revo rural Russia seeds semicolonial semicolonial countries semicolonial world social labor social relations socialist revolution Socialist Workers Party soil Soviet Union Stalinist Steve Clark Teamsters Thomas Sankara tion toilers trade transformation of nature Trotskyism U.S. rulers United urban V.I. Lenin vanguard workers and farmers workers and peasants worldwide www.pathfinderpress.com