The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 13, 1933, Page 4

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" 3s 99; 1 month, Te ‘ Published o: ine Compfotaily Publishing Co., Inc., daily except Sunday, ot & EB Page Four Telephone ALgouquin 4-7956. Cable “DAIWORK.~ Lith St, Add New York City, N. ¥ ‘By mail everywhere: One sxeepting Borouch of Manhattan ani ° ‘nst the Cabitalist O i Indispensable Pamphlets _ }\, ] gainst the Capitals ensive | THE SACIALIST PARTY, LAST’; guments are also based n facts, }/ 4 $ 2 tae ieta Fe oR BULWARK OF CAPITALISM, | facts which many revolutionary( AN EDITORIAL Ue MR as ee by Moissaye J. Olgin. Workers’ | workers know, but which have for Comm ‘ ec se-oprretane eben Library Publishers. 2 cents. | the most part been hidden trom P ithe glib ot CAPITALISM DEFENDS ITSELF | the rank and file members of the phe THROUGH THE SOCIALIST | Socialist Party. And it is espe= ; ¢ Homeees LABOR PARTY, by Moissaye | cially important that this pamphlet ‘ nthe U Sta : oh ead age ee Poenes J. Olgin. Workers’ Library Pub- | be put in the hands of évery) so- ' ly 7 , sialon testes eesti) Nog ah lishers. 3 cents. cialist worker and every worker who Bnew f een of ss mass | ® Ge still has illusions. about the 6..P, “ae : t a, own imperialism, American impe- | Reviewed by A. B. MAGIL isis eve isses. gi ae 4 stonom ic orkit cting the wrong approach Se wn HAT is the Socialist Party, ‘Socialist: Party o economic struz= developir cont en lasing: batore\ Ee eae as what is the Socialis) Labor | gies, its attitude.towards the Negro « Gf the hose’ BIGgAHM WIMOHY ta arte ERA Party, and what are their respec- | question, towards private property, ¢ t rier ( on ed and developed to higher stage, but only tive roles?’ Books can be written | the ballot, ee Ra Teed bean Py height . ns arising from the masses themselves and on both these branches of Amer- noviee nie ahd he puts the. ° The Plenu t Cc e unripe, semi-revolutionary feeling of ican social-democracy, but the main spotlight oR “Socialists im our t after the recent 12 f B.C id the asses against the imperialist invasion of China. facts can be stated briefly in a few time”—Milwaukee, the patadise of ° i the ‘specific task of ni: 2 ay Che t weakness in our anti-war activities is printed pages, in a way that work- wage-cuts, forced: labor, evictions ‘ ‘ Pp situation of increasec nge f he fact that the mistakes have been allowed to create | ers can understand—facts that are and clubbings of the unempl d \ bs class strugelc Ss ity in the development of mass actions against not mere information, but ammu- A serious shortcoming ofits Fi of. the Cor Ir iona a sharply increasing the activities on | nition in the daily struggle. This pamphlet is its failtre to t 12th Plenum basis of self-correction. is what these two pamphlets by the “left wing” of docisiefaatore, t The struggle against social-fascism was emphasized | M. J. Olgin have tried to do, and the Musteites and the “Militant” é i by the Plenum as the key point in our struggle for they have succeeded in a very great group who are being fotced by ‘tha 1 he majority of the working class. The Plenum cor- {| | degree. Issued during the rush of radicalization of the workers and ¢ hi cted some of the wrong estimates on the results of | the election campaign, they were | ino mounting resentment of the t t he elections which underestimates the danger of | to a large extent overlooked; but | S. P. rank and file to resort to rev~ t the 14th P s uid ft ‘The Plenum rejected the ideas that the issues they raise and the facts | olutionary phrases and gestures in i for examinir carr ou workers must go through the school of | they reveal are of permanent im- | order to carry out their, betrayal t the line of t 1 E.C.C.1 e 16) « in order to accept the leadership of | Portance, and they should be dis- work. While he exposes the treach- 4 y The Plenum particularly emphasized that ‘. | tributed in the thousands. | ery of the “old guard” socialists in } ch shop activities, in the development of strike } ‘THe pamphlet. on the S. L. P, is | the needle trades, he fails to-point t blishec t es. we must defeat the social-fascists, parti- | @ little masterpiece ‘of Communist | out the role of the Musteites among 5 ularly the “left” social-fascists, by means of a Lenin- ae et | polemics. -Itis hot-‘merely an ex- | the. miners (support. of -Howatt- 4 some impre ww in ist application of the united front from below in the | re | posure ‘of the counter-revolutionary | Walker in Hlinois in 1929-30. and } ou ty or the every-day needs of the masses, whic “They got Ruby Bates’ letter, boss!” “Avw, fergit it! They’re ‘ | i" lenum o the Daily Worker, 50 E, 13th St, New Yerk, N. ¥. To Broaden and Lead Mass Struggles | the workers to revolutionary leadership’ The By Burck Canada: One year, $! character of this little sect, but is “Ammunition in the Battle” $5; 3 months, $3 of the Pearcy-Ansbury-Allard: mis~ | i | | at the same time an exposition of | i é ~ 4 Mlasdssior n Detro! PI arply condemned the dangerous tendency to | ___. a ny ay | many of the basic Seincipiee of | eee. BShes agen eae a which is a I ther the reformist, leaders and honest masses } | Communism. By using telling | ers (the brazen ‘sellouts at Eliza- : movement is a Jiheeee Swell as the’ open onnoxtunisy ten~” | e ¢ + | quotations from the S. L. P. elec- | bethton, Tenn., and Marion, N. C. j of the Com ig ¢ oe S etely in Se fo ae) the leaned | | tion platform and its organ, the | in 1929, the strikebreaking in Pat- ‘ struggle for t : bets sd es a a or “unity at an? price” | | Weekly People, Olgin proves that | erson in 1930, the 40 per cent wage- ‘ main ‘al 2 A ue v r ace! this party, which constantly speaks | cut put over by the Musteite offi- ; of the fir ¢ Shop ; . * ° | | in the name of Marxism and at- | cials of. the American Federation : iti line ¥ Hat HE building of the red trade unions, and the devel- | tacks the Communist Party as “re- | of Full-Fashioned Hosit Work- i It was er heen opment of an opposition movement in the reform- | ; 2 formist,” is the worst ene if ) x i {mproveme: work | ist unions, was the center of the discussion at the | 1. Produced by the German workers, | synonym for the capitalists. Hitler- | yyarsism and is everywhere ar ie See ee oot the nasty Seta } of the Part hip of | Plenum, In this connection the Plenum most deci- By MAX BEDACHT. which in the past “only” had to | ism told its victims: hit the Jew the struggle for surance, which h cussed the qu It has been noted tk of the struggle for in'the recent strugg! ness and Bolshevik white chauvinism i; alone 1 in- sively rejected the idea of some comrades that our work in the reformist unions constitutes an obstacle to the building of the red unions, and separating these two phases of the same work. Tho Plenum em- hasized that our main task is the building of our red rade unions, simultaneously building the broadest movement in the reformist unions. The key for our w in the reformist unions and the buiiding of the trade unions is the development of shop work. The recent shop conferences helped a great deal in the work of the Plenum, Nevertheless, in shop work ECENT developments in Berlin rightfully have drawn the atten- tion of the masses of workers, every- where to that weak link in the chain of the cavitalist world which is Germany. There, if all capital- ist countries, the class struggle is at present sharpest and is rapidly nearing revolutionary forms and | aims. supply profits for their capitalists, now had to produce funds for rep- aration payments in addition. That is why the essence of statecraft of German capitalism during all the post-war years was an effort of making the German workers work more and eat less. Work more to guarantee an absolute increase of Surplus; eat less, to add to the ab- solute also a relative increase of and you hit capitalism. It told them that those attacking national- ism because it helps the capitalists are really Jewish agents of the capitalists or agents of the Jewish capitalists bent upon destroying the unity of the German people. This “unity” is presented ‘as the only way out of Germany’s misery. Thus, with a few left phrases, Hitlerism turned the anti-capitalist hatred of strument of. capitalist réaction. In the short space of 38 small pages Olgin manages to deal with almost every phase of the activity of the S. L. P., both with its theory and its practice, revealing the counter- revolutionary unity of this theory and practice. He also discusses at some length the pamphlet written by Arnold Peterson, national sec- retary of the S. L. P., entitled: | socialists. as “Cassidy“in the print- ing trades and. Lefkowltz~in the Teachers’ Uniori. , ee Te : ver despite shortcomings, this pamphlet does its job well. So~ cial-democracy is in all countries, as the 12th Plenum of the Execu- tive Committee of the Communist : International again emphasized, strengthening he rights of the the Party exposes its weakest sides—a weakness which The world crisis of capitalism | such surplus. the masses into a reactionary force Nara aed penis ihe the main social support of ¢apital- Negro masses, which is d by though it should have been corrected in the past, be- took Germany into an especially | «gpapILIZATION”. in the hands of the ca italists. An- id sat A great weakness of our comes now vitally dangerous and absolutely no longer severe grip. Germany was defeated ti-semitism is thus constructed as only pamphlet issued by this ism, the chief obstacle on the path | “ 9 to the overthro' italism Syork is the ke up the red & be tolerated at a time when the main task of the | in the world war. The Versailles | On this basis, German capital- | & safety valve which is to produce aus anes ad eae une | and the establisimeat ie piscine Wen nidin. char t Communist Parties is the preparing of the working | Treaty became the certificate for | ism re-established and re-stabilized | anti-Jewish pogroms as a backfire heed ier be paign. This vile | tartan dictatorship. Both these @a) The Plen and exploited masses, in the course of economic | nat defeat, presented by the vie- itself economically -after the revo- | against threatening anti-capitalist | panier Hen ee ent | pamphlets, which: were qublishea respect in our lee, tot the wining \of Wie raayenty OF tee We iors to the vanguished. It cut out | lutionary convulsions of 1918-19. | robellicns. } SasOlG yea cities ec ‘on | PY Workers Library Publishers for eiieee the 1 Tie policy of the united front in line with tne agin | of Germany most important slices | The political aspects of this te- | pb sti 5 |) uation pet heuthas Seepane a the Communist Party\of the U. 8. the main re nik me f the ECOL is our f fia lever i ie bs os N | of its economic base. The iron and j establishment of capitalist rule in | THE natioualist propaganda of the re of Oigit, who 6x A., are valuable and necessary ad- takes up 1 for tt iene ots corre, mass iiey called for by the, “4th ¢oal deposits of upper Silesia, now | Germany willbe déalt with élse- | Hitlerism proceeds similarly. The it not only as a Neat ti ‘pea ditions to the arsenal from which masses, 3 Planiin: of okt waters a ‘ireatent obstavle in the | Polish, are an example. At the same | where. Here we only deal with ih masses instihetively blame the last tion UB | the working class imust take its RS ic Bc Season ie development of our policy of the united front is the | time, this tresty burdened Germany A ORGHERC GERI SG aie oie es the worst kind of provocation in | peyb"s im that struggle, And they sult of oh and increasing leadership of the | “eeP Tooted sectarianism. A correct mass policy can | en cimee aint obligations were | ton of post-war capitalism in Ger- | native capitalists to the “victor na- | he interest of the government aula tor the Bee cere Party amonc: only be carriedl through if we carry on the struggle on many was the yfaerease of the mis- | abashed lies and distortions, but as | cents for the 8. P. patnphlet and 3 ey, Pitas valled reparations and not indemni- } tions”. Hitlerite propaganda de- | Paley ea gents for the oni ies pohference W The Plenum tOgk Wp CONGHY the Holy CP the cited | teh @id. not make their payment | exy.of the German asses THIN | Glagke elagg-tivicione une ertinete | paniphles on thé Socialist | that makes it posible foo eas confere! The Plenum took up concretély the policy of the united les did not ” " ‘ fi of 4 lab makes it possible for every the for: front and our mistakes iti connection with our trade | any easter. stabilization, . therefore, was creation of Jewish propaganda. The Party deals with a much broader | worker, employed or unemployed, union work, in connection with our struggle against ‘The first installments of these ; Pecessity a precarious one. It de- | unity of interest of the working | and more complex subject. Its ar- g the youth ague into lal-fascism. um of our Party decided that the Party convention on May 4th to 9th. The 8th ion of our Party will be one of the most t_in its history. ‘This convention must re- lease all of the forces of the Party for the development of mass work, for enriching the inner life of the Party, for the development of our inner democracy, for bring- ing forward and training new cadres, and the renewing and refreshing of the Party leadership. ies Gear UR Party is facing great tasks. The growing strike struggles in the country, the growing upsurge amongst the unemployed, amongst the farmers, the ‘innings of the national liberation struggles of the ‘© masses, the growing direct menace of war, em- phasizes the correctness of the 12th Plenum resolution on the end of capitalist stabilization. The revolutionary reparation payments were met in | the main by means of international | loans. ‘These loans were secured by pawning some of the very sources of funds for future pay- ments (state railways, etc.) GERMAN WORKERS PAY. ‘The money for these enormous tribute payments and loan amorti- zations had to be raised somehow. Since capitalism still rules in Ger- many, it can be easily understood, that the capitalists were not going to pay this tribute out of their “earnings”, Out of their profits. 4 lost war is not permitted to inter- fere with the rate of profit; at pended not only on the’ continuous submissiveness of the German mas- ses to this policy of having them work more and eat less; it also de- pended on the continued market- ability of the growing surplus which the incrwasingly harder-working but also increasingly less-consum- in’ German workers created and piid up. This, in fact, determined not only the continued stability of German but of world capitalism. CONTRADICTIONS. Here was an insurmountable obstacle in the desire of the vic- tor governments of eating the take ot their victory and at the same masses of the world, a unity which croses all national boundary lines, is buried by Hitlerism in mountains of empty end meaningless national- ist phrases. These phrases pro- claim the “unity” of the natior ‘This propaganda intends to sf the suffering masses from figit- ing for themselves and to win them to fight for the interests of the rich instead, by declaring the in- terests of the capitalists the inter- ests of the nation. Class peace is put forward as the remedy, and class struggle as the cause of the misery of the masses. This pro- paganda aims at.a new war to win back for Germany, that is for the to buy them. ‘What ‘Daily’ Means is Shown by Letters from Workers Y Rite widespread response of work~ ers and working-class groups to the Daily Worker drive for $35,000, & spontaneous response which the districts have been far too slow in organizing, is shown in the follow- ing dispatch: From a group of women workers money for this paper by holding a benefit dance, as we aré very much interested in this paper.” From CU. 8. Vet Hospital And an inmate of the U. 8. Vet~ erans’ Hospital at Oteen, North Carolina, writes, simply: “I have Peicicn, upsurge is wrowing. |Our Party is faced with the task | least not if the capitalists can help | time of preserving it, ‘The victor | German eapitalisis, a place in the | in Scheneciady, NW: “We ane a | Tabed TP ofit canine Shee build the Y.C.L of overcoming in the shortest period our lagging be- | it. Profit is sacred under-capital- | governments wanied to collect rep- | sun they lost in the last war. The | newly-formed group of working | hich rt mie Es ss c, within the arr ind the tempo of the revolutionary developments | ism. The maintenance of the right | arations forever after; but they “greatness” of Germany, which | women, organized into a Women’s | enclose.’ ‘The Plenur plished ‘hroughout the world. To the degree that we over- | to collect profit is the condition | also wanted to continue, forever greatness is measured by the op- | Council. As yet, we haven't had | & Bo Harris of 1 14th Plenum carried ou tasks’ outline not: yet beer deyelopin in the our arianism, that we root ourselves in the industries, will our Party fulfill its historic mis- as the vanguard of the working class, as a section of the Communist International. come bi of existence, and the enforcement of the collection is the purpose of the capitalist governments. It is the constitution and the law of after, exploiting their own work- ers, running their own factories, selling their own goods. To col- portunities the possibly victorious German capitalists have in exploit- ing the world, is turned into an much experience in carrying on work, but feeling the need: for re~ | sponding to the emergency call of ‘onganoxie, Kansas, sends $3, and writes: “En- closed find P. O. money order for $2 and also a $1 Dill, which ¥ got ¥ lect reparations, however, necessi- | inviting mirage. The purpose ef | he . | from: another: lad as a contribu- Be and The Plenum has established greater clarity, has laid | every capitalist state whether its | tated not only the amassing of sur- | this illusion is to make the present” | be ee ee tion. Please put it in the jackpot halting the the basis for the development of collective work and | form be monarehial or republican. | plus products by the German capi- | misery of the masses bearable in | planning to arrange a social soon, | for the Daily Worker. . . Good lished the n Pere henie cae MARGE eA = talists, but also the chance to sell | expectation of a “glorious” future. | and all proceeds will go to the | Mek to.you, and we are with you." genta. ast of transition to a new round of wars a cies ered 'HEREFORE, the funds for rep- | them. That chance collided with | Thus it hopes to transform a re- Daily Worker.” | heise wore een can b. exercise Bolshevik self-criticism, to lay the basis aration payments had to come | the desire of the French, British | bellion against this misery from a * | «YOUR editorial thi Be pest seit c the carrying out of the tasks placed before us in | from the German masses. ‘The un- | and other capitalists, to sell their | revolution againch th rapitaliste to “Gave Last Cent.” ei ha? chen ec eee feared 6 Stor Oe ee TNNES Of Progress in | paid labor taken from them had | own goods produced ‘by their own | a war for -the capitalists From a Dallas, Texas worker: “I | .1,0F the unemployed and the rapid t our mass work, the ere id serve ae the basis | © be increased, ‘The surplus value | workers in their own factories, On “PERMANENT” am a reader of the Daily Worker | T0le of the Dally Worker in these eee Menum: re the here ade tienakic pes ncn pero keg Ay mui de a eee ee top of it all, the policy of having | GOUNTER-REVOLUTION. and when I get through with it y | Sttuggles is a timely one,” writes es state : : fo i e up es lage a iat “sige geen | Hitler will not s eed in putting | the workers work more and eat less, The upper strate of the Hitler | #1ve dt to other fellow-workers. wha the East Side Unemployed »Coun~ the Part: ae Nee Ail be a Tor PEpOIULIGdS ear daela. “The | inte effect his braggart promises to | not only increases the marketable he upper strata, of the are unable to subscribe. When they | Cl of New York. “We of the Un- B are faced w of this the P| Convention of our Party must be made the instru~ + for hastening this development which will make Party a mass party of the American working class. Bolshevist Analysis ‘a Vital World Problems his capitalist masters. Jumber 20 “Communist Interna~ tional” is also enriched by the concluding speech of Comrade Piat~ nitsky at the Twelfth Plenum on “The Tasks of the Communists in the Trade Union Movement.” His remarks on work within the re- formist and anti-revolutionary products but it a'so narrows down the markets for them. a Ra new stability of capitalism thus found itself caught inex- tricably in the meshes of capital- ism’s own economic laws. The very base of the new stability of world capitalism became the source of an movement are, of course, not vic- tims, of these illusions. They are their producers. These political dope peddlers, former army officers, | ideologists and members of the bourgeoisie and of the petty bour- geoisie, and some members of the junker class, are consciously orga- nizing and training the shock troops of fascism, for the defense read about this drive they wan’ed to. help, but, not working, they couldn't. They wanced te help so bad they. gave the last cent they had. Some-of them have been out. of work for the last three or four years. I am sending $1 as their donation.” “I recognize the necessiiy of the | co-operate immedi: employed Councils belong).to a fighting organization and we must i jately in the V7 to save the only Fp Sg Sir actually and correctly reporting all working-class struggles to the masses, Our budget is reduced to terms of nickels and dimes and even pennies, but thousands: of fata ‘ ennies coul By A. M. WICKS the working lass and its ) published recently. tm the Dally | trade unions are deserving of spe- apes nt lla ond German capitetin. But great | Dally Worker as a mighty weapon Daniahe cod Briefe EFORE the echoes of the aguand, the: Communist Party of | Worker) it depicts ths zising imare | 1S) ASS eee ane arty of | lnvited, as the present world crisis | Masses ee a ae Of Herminie, Pa. ot thovehee von: | America that would enable the Munist denunciation of tt Germa: oie of pager ree niideon fe ee ere Be the U. 8, A. where there 4s, as yet, at cepitelim. ‘This crisis does not | <0! Victime ‘of Hitler's detongvey «I tributeii’ fy ae eons its picalt famies of the social-democratic ntalets algadenre us i = ‘ é contact with | OMly shake the economic structure Noaracaat : ? a closed is our contribu- leaders who told the workers to |! ia niusl-alwaze be. somal diane ar eee OU ea ie elect tacktne: | Oheapteatiamn th tteetoindation: ay. |) BD OF ee ae pion, Harry Hyman, Palludelphin, | tion of $10 to the drive.” ve for Hir ZR ittempting to tke = | parts aeaEE in the | also confronts capitalism with a ft ts ‘Sill ie a: “Enclosed is 25 cents. e | ‘rom a worker in Cuba, Iinois: Pee Bln ca imate the situation in Germany higher levels, become more political. THEMEN iceman ares, working class, radicalized by. its HIS is u determining factor of | small amount is explained by the | “I am not a member ofthe Party, to roar through Germany allure to understand the | low: it contributes to the cise; | countries and of the Communist | suffering and by the education de- the possibility of the “success” | fact that I am only 14 years old.” but I am sending you a dollar bill ler became the chief figr vore Marx that “the party of eratian tabcien as hie who | cells (nuclei) and trade union sec- | Tived from its experiences which | Of Hitler. Will Hitler temporarily From , an Unemployed Council | to help save the greatest paper in the dictatorship of the be lution rallies the party of coun tad been diverted by social dema- tions in the factories reveal many | facts turn the new economic crisis } succeed in essing the burden of | which sent $5: “We, as the Un- | America. Mr. Mike Emmett has The Hindenburg-Brue revolution ome to | BOey He Re Ranks Gesere Sbd De. | satacte anc snclewta tow to eve ot ott CRCietiaat feo & DoUtel Gries the German masses? Will he thus | employed Council of Kent, Ohio, | been handing me the. Daily ment made way ke ane only come fighters in the anti-fuscis Hitlerism grew in this soil. avoid revolution?, are the auestions burg-Von Papen fs r with its bandit decrer Von Paper stepped temporarily out to give way to Schleicher, who was the door mat over which Hitler walked into the German cabinet, with Papen again in a strategic posi where eperience in bandi by the German capitalist ® desperate effort to sire: its fascist dictatorship NOT SIGN OF STRENGTH Tapid reshifti inet, this frenzied pl MHore open dictatorship is not 2 sign of strength. On the contrary i6 ie & measure of the increasing Giiticulties of ‘the: raling is being v lution he reaction is directed VALUABLE MATERIAL A long step toward overcoming | uch disor taken coun on by a car fon which is shown most united front. The article also shows how the greatest election successes were ob- tained in those places where the mass struggle, especially the strike struggle was most highly developed. “This strike activity was of decisive importance for the result of the parliamentary elections, that re- sulted in six million votes for the Communist Party,” says the article. Staggering blows were delivered social-democracy the principal social bulwark of the bourgedisie in the course of these growing struggles. When i is remem- bered thet the keynote of the Communist election campaign was hout Urge against, wh! conceptions can be ful study of.the his come them, Comrade Thaelmann, leader of the Communist Party of Germany, in his concluding remarks on econ- omic struggles discusses problems of building the united front from below, of mobilizing the working masses. He also exposes the “left social-fascists” who, in alliance with the ‘Trotskyites and Brandle- rites put forth the slogan of union of the Social Democratic Party and the Communist Party to divert the desire for unity among the masses into false political channels—unity with the leaders instead of genuine rank end file united front actions. THER articles that round out It ts partly 8, product of a mass radicali- zation which capitalist demagogy turned into reactionary clrannels. It is no miracle that capitalist demagogy can produce such results. ‘The capitalist monopoly on educa- tion fills the masses with capitalist illusions. These illusions make it possible for cavitalist demagogs to invert anti-capitalist tendencies in the heads of these masses into re- actionary pro-capitalist violence. “KILL JEWS!” NOT CAPITALISTS! ‘The main_ins*ryments of Bitter. ism in this"work were anti-semite ism and nationalism. Anti-semit- asked today in meetings. No, Hit~ Jer’s function is not that. His task is not to revise the policies of Ger- man capitalism so/that they may become: less burdensome to the masses. His task is to carry thru these policies of capitalism, by all means. Since these policies must of necessity become progressively more burdensome to the masses and therefore challenge, more and more the resis*ance of the masses against them, the rule of German capitalism today takes the form of fascism. ‘The increasingly anti- social system of capitalism cannot be maintained any moré by normal means. Its anti-social character made a special effort to raise Worker... .” Letters from Our Readers ANGELO HERNDON’S 20-| YEAR CHAIN GANG TERM | Atlanta, Ga. Editor of the Daily Worker, Dear Sir: Georgia officials have issued col- umns of statements telling the world that John L. Spivak’s book, “Georgia Nigger,” is a volume of misrepresentation, and that Robert WHAT YOU WILL FIND |. IN FEBRUARY ISSU; OF “THE COMMUNIST™ “A New Victory of the Peaceful” the Struggles of the Unemployed,” by I. Amter. ui face of the rapid grow the development of the | “extra-parliamentary mass struggle | V this invaluable number of | ism has ever been the socialism of | creates continuously anew revo- urns’ book, “I'M a Fugiti on ine nd ot abttariet tee elements of the revolutionary crisi ary upsurge throughout | of the proletariat sad tis sastaring |The. Oolemantst IntarnalionaP | the tacie © Te therefore, did not | lutionary reactions on the part of | piliott By Georgia Chain Gang,” is a | Dilization in the US.A,” by H. M, in, Germany.’ «Py the ‘fate of the ., Milere has just come to | of @ revolutionary crisis in Ger- | deal with the non-aggression pacts | lie far from Hitler's natural incli-. | the messes. ‘The danger of revolu- | From ® Georgia Chain Aa rapidly growing forces of revoiutio: 1 No. 20 (dated December ist, | many” and further considering that | showing them to constitute a new | nations. At the same time ii pro- | tion aganist capitalism becomes But That are these officials | _ “The Revisionism of Sidney there is being concentrated thc 1952) which contains additional tn- | this upsurge has continued at an | victory for the U. 8. S. R. and a | vided an easy means of exploiting | daily more acute. German capital- now, what are bo : ah Hook,” by Earl Browder. forces of countersrerolution.” ‘The ddiblé material, ever swifter tempo since the elec- | new success for the world prole- } the growing hatred of the German | ism tries to meet this acute danger | going to tell the world abou - “Prologue to th of Hiller-Papen government can- ne TT tions it is quite clear why the Ger- | tariat. masses against capitalism, The au- | of revolution by establishing per- | gelo Herndon’s twenty years mn ., the N . Peo if fot“but increase the tempo of thi FH eading article in No. 20 of | man capitalist class is forced to We cannot too strongly urge | ti-semitic propaganda of flitlerism | Manent counter-revolution —fas- | Georgia chain gang, ie ks a ie Ae egro People,” by James 8, development.‘ ‘Bvery ‘shift of class “The Communist International” | resort to the most desperate mess- | every revolutionary worker, every | performed the miracle of changing | ism. . j Me Pane! ee a eg Te 4 forces in this entire developmer especially timed under the title, | ures against its mortal’ class en- | fighter against the hunger and,war | the anti-capitalists tendencies of , bd Per ving “Technocracy — A Reactionary aS been unmistakably in the di- "he Communist Party of Gers | emfes, Tt 1s this revolutionary up- | program of the capitalist class to | great masses into anti-Jewish ten- (Tomorrow: “The German ‘Very trully youre, Utopia,” by V. 3, Jerome. EMbA ‘of strenethening the po: nany Tikes ibe Offensive” (re- surge that ts the guarantee that | secure and study this number, dencles, Tv simply set the Jews as | decinl-Democratic Retraval.” ¥ GTORGIAN. Book Reciews } ‘}

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