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Marxists Internet Archive Newsletter February 16- February 28, 2009

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Feb 28, 2009, 7:01:56 PM2/28/09
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Marxists Internet Archive Newsletter February 16 - February 28, 2009
==================================================
Additions to the
SWEDISH-PORTUGUESE-GERMAN-ENGLISH language sections
==================================================
For daily updates on the MIA (and mirrors of the MIA itself) see:
http://www.marxists.org/admin/new [main site]
http://www.marxistsfr.org/ [French mirror]
http://marxists.catbull.com/ [German mirror]
http://marxists.anu.edu.au/admin/new [Australian mirror]
http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/marxists/admin/new [US, East Coast mirror]
http://marxists.architexturez.net/ [US, Southern/Gulf Coast mirror]
http://marxists.kgprog.com/ [US, West Coast Mirror]
==================================================
Regular monthly donations to the Marxists Internet Archive is now
possible! See http://marxists.org/admin/donate/index.htm for details.
Support the MIA! Get our 2009 V1.1 DVD.
See: http://marxists.org/admin/cd/index.htm
Get the "Great Anger", original translation
by the MIA see: http://www.erythrospress.com/store/main.html
==================================================

As part of this newsletter, we are pleased to share an excerpt from
the new Marxists Internet Archive Publications book "The Great
Anger: Ultra-Revolutionary Writing in France from the Atheist Priest
to the Bonnot Gang." The work is a translation from the court
proceedings of French anarchist Emile Henry (1872-1894) who faced
trial for the 1894 bombing of Café Terminus in Paris, France.
Mitchell Abidor’s new English translation of the interrogation is
based on the text from Jean Maitron’s, Ravachol et les anarchistes
(Paris, Julliard, 1964). The exerpt is located at the bottom of the
newsletter. Order "The Great Anger" at:
http://www.erythrospress.com
==================================================

http://marxists.org/svenska/deutscher/1960/byrakratins_rotter.html
28 February, 2009: Added to the Swedish Isaac Deutscher Internet
Archive:

The Roots of Bureaucracy, Isaac Deutscher, 1960
[Thanks to Martin Fahlgren]


http://marxists.org/svenska/lukacs/1936/werthers.htm
28 February, 2009: Added to the Swedish Literature Subject Archive:

The Sorrows of Young Werther, Georg Lukacs, 1936
[Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]


http://marxists.org/svenska/psykologi/index.htm
28 February, 2009: Added to the Swedish Psychology Subject Archive:

Dialectic Materialism and Psychoanalysis, Wilhelm Reich, 1929
The Mass Psychology of Fascism, Wilhelm Reich, 1933
The Use of Psychoanalysis in Historical Research, Wilhelm Reich, 1934
Our Congratulations to Freud on his Birthday, Wilhelm Reich, 1936
[Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]


http://marxists.org/subject/china/peking-review/index.htm
27 February 2009: Added to the Peking Review subject archive are the
following 10 articles from 1966:

A New Stage of the Socialist Revolution in China
Decision of the CC of the CCP Concerning the GPCR
Long Live Mao Tse-tung’s Thought" (45th anniversary of CCP)
The Sunlight of the Party Illuminates the Road of the Great Cultural
Revolution
The Brilliance of Mao Tse-tung’s Thought Illumintes the World [Part 2]
Long Live the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
On Reform of Entrance Examination and Enrolment in Higher Educational
Institutions
New Victory for Mao Tse-tung’s Thought
A Great Revolution That Touches the People to Their Very Souls
Put Mao Tse-tung’s Thought in the Forefront, Cadres Give the Leadat
Every Level
[Thanks to massline.org for allowing us to mirror these issues of
Peking Review, and David Walters]


http://marxists.org/svenska/trotsky/1930/09/vandningen_i_komintern.html
26 February, 2009: Added to the Swedish Leon Trotsky Internet Archive:

The Turn in the Communist International and the Situation in Germany,
Leon Trotsky, 1930
[Thanks to Martin Fahlgren]


http://marxists.org/archive/james-clr/works/1946/03/party.htm
26 January 2009: Added to the C.L.R James Archive A polemical document
on party building:

The Task Of Building The American Bolshevik Party (Bulletin of the
Workers Party, March 1946)
[Thanks to Damon Maxwell]

http://marxists.org/history/etol/writers/howe/1946/03/johnson.htm
26 February 2009: Added to the Irving Howe Archive:

On Comrade Johnson’s American Resolution – Or Soviets In The Sky
(Bulletin of the Workers Party, March 1946)
[Thanks to Damon Maxwell]


http://marxists.org/history/france/revolution/meslier/1728/conclusion.htm
26 February 2009: Added to the Jean Meslier Archive:

Conclusion to Memoire des Pensées et Sentiments in Oeuvres de Jean
Meslier, 1728
[Thanks to Mitch Abidor]


http://marxists.org/svenska/trotsky/1936/07/lardomar_av_spanien.html
25 February, 2009: Added to the Swedish Leon Trotsky Internet Archive:

The Lesson of Spain (Primeras lecciones de España), Leon Trotsky, 1936
[Thanks to Martin Fahlgren]


http://marxists.org/history/france/revolution/meslier/1728/conclusion.htm
24 February 2009: Added to the Jean Meslier Archive:

Conclusion to Memoire des Pensées et Sentiments in Oeuvres de Jean
Meslier, 1728
[Thanks to Mitch Abidor]


http://marxists.org/archive/eastman/index.htm
23 February 2009: Added to the Max Eastman Archive, two documents from
The Liberator on the leader of the American Socialist Party in the
early 20th century, Morris Hillquit:

Hillquit Excommunicates the Soviet (November, 1920)
Hillquit Repeats His Error (January, 1921)
[Thanks to Tim Davenport and Damon Maxwell]

http://marxists.org/archive/eastman/index.htm
23 February 2009: Added to the Max Eastman Archive :

John Reed, Bolshevik Envoy to the United States – A Character Sketch
(February, 1918)
Letter to Robert Minor (June, 1919)


http://marxists.org/svenska/mandel/1970/leninismen.html
23 January, 2009: Added to the Swedish Ernest Mandel Internet Archive:

The Leninist Theory of Organisation
[Thanks to Martin Fahlgren]


http://marxists.org/subject/china/peking-review/index.htm
22 February 2009: Added to the Peking Review subject archive are the
following 6 articles from 1966:

The Taching Spirit and the Taching Men
U.S. Bombing of Chinese Consulate [in Laos] Protested
Hooliganism Continues in Indonesia
Revolutionary Leadership: County Party Secretary Chiao Yu-lu [Hailing
a model Party leader and “an outstanding pupil of Chairman Mao”]
Hold High the Great Red Banner of Mao Tse-tung’s Thinking; Actively
Participate in the Great Socialist Cultural Revolution About
literature and art (and not about the politically focused GPCR which
was then about to be launched).
Sweep Away All Monsters
[Thanks to massline.org for allowing us to mirror these issues of
Peking Review, and David Walters]


http://marxists.org/portugues/tematica/rev_prob/45/figuras.htm
22 February 2009: Added to the Portuguese Temática Archive:

Figuras do Movimento Operário José Diaz.
[Thanks to Fernando Araújo]


http://marxists.org/deutsch/geschichte/usa/iww/1933/todeskrise.htm
22 February 2009: Added to the German Industrial Workers of the World
(IWW) History Archive:

Programm und Aufgaben - Die Todeskrise des kapitalistischen Systems
und die Aufgaben des Proletariats (Program and Mission - The Death
Crisis of the Capitalist System and the Mission of the Proletariat —
German language IWW-pamphlet) May 1933.
[Thanks to Thomas Schmidt]


http://marxists.org/archive/foster/index.htm
February 21, 2009: Added to the William Z. Foster Archive:

The New Political Bases for a Labor Party in the United States, (1935)
The Renaissance of the American Trade Union Movement, (1937)
[Thanks to Brian Reid]


http://marxists.org/svenska/brinton/1970/irrationalitet.htm
February 21, 2009: Added to the Swedish Maurice Brinton Internet
Archive:

The Irrational in Politics, Maurice Brinton, 1970
[Thanks to Förbundet Arbetarmakt]


http://marxists.org/archive/dunne/index.htm
21 February 2009: Added to the William F. Dunne Archive:

Permanent Counter-Revolution The Role of the Trotzkyites in the
Minneapolis Strikes, (1934)
[Thanks to Brian Reid]


http://marxists.org/svenska/psykologi/reich/1934/klassmedvetande.htm
February 21, 2009: Added to the Swedish Psychology Subject Archive:

What is Class Consciousness?, Wilhelm Reich, 1934
[Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]


http://marxists.org/svenska/brinton/1970/irrationalitet.htm
February 21, 2009: Added to the Swedish Maurice Brinton Internet
Archive:

The Bolsheviks and Workers' Control 1917-1921, Maurice Brinton, 1970
[Thanks to Jonas Holmgren]


http://marxists.org/svenska/marx/1874/flyktinglitteratur/02.htm
February 21, 2009: Added to the Swedish Marx/Engels Internet Archive:

Programme of the Blanquist Commune Refugees, Friedrich Engels, 1874
[Thanks to Michael Wirth]


http://marxists.org/archive/deleon/pdf/index.htm
21 February 2009: The following is a list of additions made to the
Daniel De Leon Internet Archive. The first item is an add-on. It is
one of two or three articles Daniel De Leon wrote for The Industrial
Worker, the IWW's first national organ, which was published as a
monthly from January-September 1906 before being suspended, presumably
for lack of funds. That is followed by a second article from the The
Industrial Worker (March 1906), then 29 Daniel De Leon editorials from
March 1906 of The Daily People and 12 Uncle Sam And Uncle Jonathan
columns from April, May, June & July 1899 issues of The People. The
March 1906 editorials bring the editorial count to 1,966 documents.

1906, January – The Evolution of Unionism
1906, March – Eastern Economic Development: Its Bearing on American
Labor
1906, March 1 – A Neat Specimen
1906, March 2 – Page 49
1906, March 3 – Spread the Light!
1906, March 4 – Lynch Law!
1906, March 6 – Open Letter
1906, March 7 – The Scorpion Stinging Itself to Death
1906, March 8 – Topsy Turvy La Follette
1906, March 9 – Unlock Those Prison Gates!
1906, March 11 – Turn on the Light!
1906, March 12 – A Lecturer Reviewed
1906, March 13 – The Workingman Outlawed
1906, March 14 – Organized Hypocrisy
1906, March 15 – Just a Few Questions
1906, March 16 – Literal, Not Figurative
1906, March 17 – The Court to the Rescue
1906, March 18 – Thrown on the Defensive
1906, March 19 – A Fitting Windup
1906, March 20 – "Incendiary Language"
1906, March 21 – Clumsy Russia
1906, March 22 – A Noble Thought and True Withal
1906, March 23 – Prohibitionists' Philosophy
1906, March 24 – Dumpy and Swearful
1906, March 25 – Off With That Mask!
1906, March 26 – A Neat Specimen
1906, March 27 – The Law of the Funnel
1906, March 28 – On Pilgrimage in Russia
1906, March 29 – Chapter XX
1906, March 30 – Is Gold at the Bottom?
1906, March 31 – Has Bell Changed His Job?
[Thanks to Robert Bills and the Socialist Labor Party of the United
States]


http://marxists.org/svenska/trotsky/1936/06/vart_gar_frankrike.html
21 February, 2009: Added to the Swedish Leon Trotsky Internet Archive:

Whither France?, Leon Trotsky, 1936
[Thanks to Martin Fahlgren]


http://marxists.org/archive/mandel/index.htm
20 February 2009: Added to the Ernest Mandel Internet Archive from our
collection of World Outlook, international newsweekly (1962-1968) of
the United Sectretariat of the Fourth International:

The Lessons Of Greece [1967]
The Belgian Elections [1968]
[Thanks to David Walters]


http://marxists.org/portugues/lenin/1916/10/imperialismo.htm
20 February 2009: Added to the Portuguese Lenin Archive:

Imperialismo e a Cisão do Socialismo, 1916
[Thanks to Vinicius Valentin Raduan Miguel and Fernando Araújo]


http://marxists.org/history/etol/newspape/fi/vol9/no01/curtis.html
20 February 2009: Added to the Fourth International Archive:

C. Curtis: Decline of the American Middle Class (1948)
[Thanks to Einde O’Callaghan]


http://marxists.org/archive/james-clr/index.htm
19 February, 2009: Added to the CLR James Internet Archive, Three
articles in a series on "Doctrine and History for the Youth":

Popular Front in Past Times [FightDecember, 1936]
The Leninist Attitude To War [FightJanuary, 1937]
The Leninist Attitude For Spain [Fight April, 1937]
[Thanks to Damon Maxwell]

http://marxists.org/archive/james-clr/works/1937/04/trials.htm
19 February, 2009: Added to the CLR James Internet Archive :

The Second Moscow Trial [FightApril and May, 1936]
[Thanks to Ted Crawford and Damon Maxwell]


http://marxists.org/portugues/trotsky/1931/revolucao/cap03.htm
19 February 2009: Added to the Portuguese Trotsky Archive:

O Ultimatismo Burocrático, 1931
[Thanks to Alexandre Linares and Fernando Araújo]


http://marxists.org/svenska/trotsky/1931/11/vad_ar_en_revolutionar_situation.html
19 February, 2009: Added to the Swedish Leon Trotsky Internet Archive:

What is a Revolutionary Situation?, Leon Trotsky, 1931
[Thanks to Martin Fahlgren]


http://marxists.org/archive/morrow-felix/1937/01/spain.htm
19 February, 2009: Added to the Felix Morrow Internet Archive:

Proposed Solutions to the Spanish Crisis [Socialist AppealJanuary 1937
[Thanks to Damon Maxwell]


http://marxists.org/archive/london/index.htm
19 February, 2009: Added to the Jack London Internet Archive are 2 of
London’s larger novels:

The Valley Of The Moon [Novel – 1913]
The Mutiny of the Elsinore [Novel – 1914]
[Thanks to David Walters and Project Gutenberg]


http://marxists.org/history/etol/index.htm
19 February 2009: The Encyclopedia of Trotskyism On-Line has created
the new Denzil Dean Harber Archive with the following 4 texts from
1933:

Seeing Soviet Russia
Reporting Soviet Russia
Trotskyism
“History of the Russian Revolution”, [Review]
[Thanks to Ted Crawford and David Walters]


http://marxists.org/svenska/deutscher/1967/ofullbordade_revolutionen.html
18 February, 2009: Added to the Swedish Isaac Deutscher Internet
Archive:

The Unfinished Revolution, Isaac Deutscher, 1967
[Thanks to Martin Fahlgren]


http://marxists.org/deutsch/archiv/mattick/index.htm
17 February, 2009: Added to the German Paul Mattick Archive:

Der Traum des Bolschewisierten Berufsrevolutionärs (The Dream of the
Bolshevik Professional Revolutionary - short story) August 1925,
[Rezension von Wollin Ernstes (wissenschaftliches) Lesen als Weg zur
Selbstbildung] (book review) September 1925,
[Rezension von W. Münzenberg Erobert den Film!] (book review) October
1925,
Ueberfahrt (Passage - Mattick's commentary on class relations aboard
the ship that brought him to the US) May 1927,
King Ben (commentary on Benjamin Purnell's cult and American popular
culture in general) August 1928,
Ernest Mandels “Spätkapitalismus” (Ernest Mandel's Late Capitalism)
1973.
[Thanks to Thomas Schmidt]


http://marxists.org/deutsch/archiv/ruehle/index.htm
17 February, 2009: Added to the German Otto Rühle Archive:

Die Grundlagen der Ehe (The Foundations of Marriage) February 1925,
Flucht in den Buddhismus (The Escape to Buddhism) March 1925,
Andere Verhältnisse und Andere Menschen (Different Conditions and
different Humans) April 1925,
Der Autoritäre Mensch und die Revolution (Authoritarian Man the
Revolution) October 1925.
[Thanks to Thomas Schmidt]


http://marxists.org/portugues/cunhal/index.htm
17 February 2009: Added to the Portuguese Álvaro Cunhal Archive:

A Verdade e a Mentira na Revolução de Abril (A contra-revolução
confessa-se), 1999
[Thanks to Edições Avante!, Rui Campos and Fernando Araújo]


http://marxists.org/svenska/trotsky/1928/06/tredje_internationalen.html
16 February, 2009: Added to the Swedish Leon Trotsky Internet Archive:

Third International after Lenin, Leon Trotsky, 1928
[Thanks to Martin Fahlgren]

==================================================

[Excerpt from "The Great Anger"]

Emile Henry The Interrogation of Emile Henry (1894)

Q: On February 12 you entered the Café Terminus.
A: Yes, at eight o’clock.
Q: Your bomb was in your pants belt.
A: No, in my overcoat pocket.
Q: Why did you go to the Café Terminus?
A: I had first gone to Bignon, the Café de la Paix and the Americain
but there weren’t enough people. So I went to the Terminus and I
waited.
Q: There was an orchestra. How long did you wait?
A: An hour.
Q: Why?
A: So that there would be a bigger crowd.
Q: And then?
A: You know full well.
Q: I’m asking you.
A: I threw away my cigar! I lit the fuse and then taking the bomb in
my hand I left and, as I was leaving the café, I threw the bomb from
the doorway.
D: You hold human life in contempt.
A: No, the life of bourgeois.
Q: You did everything you could to save yours.
A: Yes, so I could start again. I counted on leaving the café, closing
the door, getting a ticket at the Saint-Lazare station, escaping, and
starting over the next day.
Q: As you left you met a waiter. Further on a certain Etienne detained
you saying: “I’ve got you, you wretch!” You answered: “Not yet.” What
did you then do?
A: I fired at him.
Q: He fell. What did you say?
A: That he was lucky that I didn’t have a better revolver.
Q: Then you were detained by a hairdresser. What did you do?
A: I shot him with the revolver.
Q; He was hit and hasn’t healed. Agent Poisson followed you.
A: At this moment, since a crowd was gathering, I stopped. I waited
for Agent Poisson and fired three shots at him with my revolver.
Q: You were then arrested, and the policemen had a hard time tearing
you from the fury of the crowd.
A: Which didn’t know what I’d done.
Q: You had special bullets on you. Why?
A: To cause more harm.
Q: And a dagger on which there was a preparation.
A: I had poisoned the blade in order to strike an anarchist informer.
Q: You were determined to strike the agent with that weapon?
A: Certainly.
Q: You were seated at a table near the door and had thrown the device
in front of you. Why didn’t you hit more people with that explosion,
since you had aimed at the orchestra?
A: I threw the bomb too high. It hit a lamp and went off course.
Q: A muffled explosion was heard and the café was completely
destroyed: tables, mirrors, woodwork were broken. There were many
wounded: twenty. One of them, M. Borde has since died. His leg was
covered with wounds. Another, M. Van Herreweghen received forty
wounds. There were women: Mme. Kingsbourg, who is still suffering from
her wounds, many others that you will hear. And these women were so
terrified that they have hidden their presence and their wounds. You
said that the more bourgeois that die the better it would be.
A: That’s just what I think.
Q: At first you said you were called Breton. A little later you
revealed yourself and you said that your name is Emile Henry and you
gave the design of your device. How was it made?
A: It was a small kettle of tin containing a detonator and a fuse.
Q: You said that you had been relatively unsuccessful. What does that
mean?
A: I wanted to kill more, but the kettle wasn’t properly closed.
Q: You had put projectiles in it.
A: I had put 120 pellets in it.
Q: Vaillant, who said he wanted to wound and not kill, had put nails
and not pellets.
A: Me, I wanted to kill and not wound.
Q: Your domicile wasn’t known.
A: I had said that I didn’t have a domicile in Paris, I declared that
I arrived from Marseilles or Peking.
Q: Soon afterwards a room at the Villa Faucheur was robbed. The police
superintendent found explosives and recognized that this was your
home.
A: I don’t know who robbed my home.
Q: You were warned that your domicile had been discovered and at that
point you declared that quantities of explosives must have been found
at your home.
A: I had enough to make twelve to fifteen bombs.
Q: (To the jury) You know the crime and the accused, who has just
cynically confessed his crime.
A: It’s not cynicism, it’s conviction.
Q: Did you want to kill the waiter, Etienne?
A: I wanted to kill all those who put themselves in the way of my
escape.
Q: Did you want to kill the Agent Poisson?
A: Certainly. His saber was raised and he would have killed me.
Q: Did you want to kill the people at the Hôtel Terminus?
A: Certainly, as many as possible.
Q: Did you want to destroy the building?
A: Oh, I couldn’t care less!
The Presiding Judge to the Jury: This would suffice to establish the
guilt of the accused. But whatever the crime, justice—and this is our
honor—never deviates form the usual rules. We must examine all the
details and pause before another act for which the accused is
reproached.
Q: Your father lived at Brevannes, then he went to Spain, took part in
the Paris Commune, and your mother found herself a widow with three
children. You received a grant at the École J.-B. Say, at seventeen
you qualified for admission to the École Polythechnique. You didn’t
continue.
A: In order not to be a soldier and be forced to fire on the
unfortunate, like at Fourmies.
Q: You found a job with a builder, M. Bordenave, your relative. How
much did you earn?
A: In Venice I earned 100F a month.
Q: Why did you leave?
A: For reasons foreign to the affair.
Q: You said that he wanted to force you to carry out a secret
surveillance, which revolted you. M. Bordenave when questioned
protested.
A: He recognized that there was a misunderstanding.
Q: You then found another job.
A: I suffered through three months of poverty before this!
Q: In any event, you soon had a position.
A: A quite mediocre one: 100 to 120 F a month.
Q: At this moment you come under the influence of one of your
brothers. A short while later you were arrested after a meeting in
honor of Ravachol, and your boss found anarchist works in your desk,
most notably a translation of an Italian newspaper indicating how to
make nitroglycerine and in which we read: “Long live theft, long live
dynamite!” We can see there the rules you put in practice in the
attack on the Rue des Bons-Enfants. So then your boss fired you.
A: I was fired when these papers were found.
Q: You looked for work at a watchmaker’s. Then you were employed by
“l’En dehors”, edited by Matha, who was condemned in 1892—the year you
arrived at the newspaper—for inciting insubordination among soldiers.
You refused to be a soldier.
A: I had done three years of school battalion and that was all I could
do as a soldier.
Q: You avoided the call to military service and your mother
disapproved of you.
A: She feared my expatriation.
Q: On the recommendation of Ortiz, a burglar, you went to work for M.
Dupuis.
A: I don’t know what Ortiz has done since I knew him.
Q: M. Dupuis had increased your salary.
A: I had much affection for him.
Q: Would you like to repeat before the jury the confessions you made
during the questioning? I would very much like it to be you that
speaks.
A: Certainly. Tomorrow I’ll give the motives for my act. The Société
des Carmaux is represented in Paris by its administration. After the
strike I bought a kettle. I had dynamite, a primer, fuses.
(The questioning continues. The accused refuses to say what he did
during 1893. During a difficult period in the questioning the
Presiding Judge shouts:)
Q: Beware of your silence!
A: I don’t care. I don’t have to beware of my silence. I know full
well that I’ll be condemned to death.
Q: Listen. I think there’s a confession that’s damaging to your pride.
Vaillant admitted that he received 100 F from a burglar. You don’t
want to recognize that you extended your hand to receive the money
from a theft, the hand that we today see covered in blood.
A: My hands are covered in blood, like your red robe is! In any case,
I don’t have to answer you.
Q: You are accused and it’s my duty to interrogate you.
A: I don’t recognize your justice.
Q: You don’t recognize justice. Unfortunately for you, you are in its
hands, and the jury will be able to appreciate this.
A: I know!
(The Presiding Judge): Be seated.

____________________

"THE GREAT ANGER, Ultra-Revolutionary Writing in France from the
Atheist Priest to the Bonnot Gang" is now available for purchase.
Orders ship upon payment and are sent via Media of First Class
(International).

"The Great Anger" is published by Marxists Internet Archive
Publications.

Purchase this book at www.erythrospress.com.

==================================================

Marxists Internet Archive Newsletter February 16- February 28, 2009
==================================================
Additions to the
SWEDISH-PORTUGUESE-GERMAN-ENGLISH language sections
==================================================
For daily updates on the MIA (and mirrors of the MIA itself) see:
http://www.marxists.org/admin/new [main site]
http://www.marxistsfr.org/ [French mirror]
http://marxists.catbull.com/ [German mirror]
http://marxists.anu.edu.au/admin/new [Australian mirror]
http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/marxists/admin/new [US, East Coast mirror]
http://marxists.architexturez.net/ [US, Southern/Gulf Coast mirror]
http://marxists.kgprog.com/ [US, West Coast Mirror]
==================================================
Regular monthly donations to the Marxists Internet Archive is now
possible! See http://marxists.org/admin/donate/index.htm for details.
Support the MIA! Get our 2009 V1.1 DVD.
See: http://marxists.org/admin/cd/index.htm
Get the "Great Anger", original translation
by the MIA see: http://www.erythrospress.com/store/main.html
==================================================

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