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The Long Crisis of Democracy

Marvin González, June 10, 2022

The following is an excerpted version of a piece authored by NYC-DSA members Marvin González and M. Fleischman in response to Warren Montag's 2021 article "The Necessity of Taking Back the Streets: Notes on DSA." Using Montag as a starting point, González and Fleischman take on a variety of topics including questions of authoritarianism, the proper method for conjunctural analysis, examples of such analysis applied to the history of political systems that currently circumscribe political action, how those systems are instantiated and managed, especially in the face of crisis throughout different epochs, and the current political situation within the right, the liberal center, and the left. These excerpts are specifically focused on a history of the political conjuncture in the US from its founding until the late 1960s and early 70s. Read Article.

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We Will Return to Pandemic Protections Within a Year

William Silversmith, June 8, 2022

William Silversmith argues that the premature relaxation of pandemic protections will lead to an increasingly untenable situation and the eventual reimposition of said protections. Read Article.

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Running Aground: The RCP and Stalinism

Doug Enaa Greene, June 2, 2022

Analyzing the intellectual output of the Revolutionary Communist Party USA (RCP), Doug Enaa Greene argues that, despite a few moments of minor insight, the Party failed to meaningfully reckon with the question of Stalinism. Read Article.

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Africa, a Health Crisis, and Intellectual Property: On decolonization and Intellectual Autonomy

Otobong Inieke, May 31, 2022

Otobong Inieke lays out the obstacles facing the development of an independent and self-reliant African public health infrastructure. Read Article.

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The Rise and Fall of Homegrown American Marxism

Daniel Tutt, May 27, 2022

Daniel Tutt explores the intellectual trajectory of U.S. Marxism during the era of the Second International and, drawing from Brian Lloyd's work on the history of U.S. radicalism, argues that the influence of Veblenian and pragmatist philosophy had a detrimental effect on the development of U.S. Marxist theory. Tutt, who has taught philosophy at George Washington University and Marymount University, is the author of Psychoanalysis and the Politics of the Family and an organizer of the Study Groups on Psychoanalysis and Politics. He is currently at work on a new Marxist critique of Nietzsche for Repeater Books. Read Article.

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Marx Did Not Invent Socialism, He Observed It

Renato Flores, May 23, 2022

In part one of a series, Renato Flores reflects on the rise and fall of the base-building tendency. Read Article.

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The Revolt of Hunger

Kaveh DadKhah, May 19, 2022

Kaveh DadKhah calls for solidarity with the current wave of proletarian struggles in Iran. Read Article.

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The Value of Dune: a Communistic Perspective

Jackson Albert Mann, May 17, 2022

Rejecting recent interpretations in the U.S. socialist press as truistic, Jackson Albert Mann makes a case for a particular communistic reading of the first novel in Frank Herbert's Dune franchise. Read Article.

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Setting the Record Straight: On the Trotskyist-led 1934 Minneapolis Teamsters Strike, the Teamsters Bureaucracy & its Aftermath

Edgar Esquivel, May 15, 2022

Trotskyist Teamsters took a leading role in a historic labor upsurge and clashed with a corrupt leadership under Dan Tobin. Twenty-four-year Teamster Edgar Esquivel tells the story. Read Article.

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When We Fight, We Win!: For an Agitational Socialist Electoral Strategy

Jack L, May 11, 2022

Jack L draws on recent campaigns in New York City to make the case for an agitational electoral strategy. Read Article.