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A few things are working.
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The federal government abandoned Reconstruction in 1877, but Black people didn’t give up on the moment’s promise. By Peniel E. JosephThe Atlantic, December 2023 Editor’s Note: This article is part of “On Reconstruction,” a project about America’s most radical experiment.…
by Mphutlane wa BofeloAmandla.org Aug 28, 2023 – In his examination of why despite their meagre results at the polls, nine non-ruling communist parties in Europe continue to have sporadic participation in multi-party coalitions in government, Sidney Tarrow indicates that…
BY BILL FLETCHER, JR.Real News Network, SEPTEMBER 21, 2023 On the occasion of the republication of ‘Return to the Source’ by Monthly Review Press, a panel of long-serving Pan-Africanists reflect on the life of Amilcar Cabral and the relevance of…
It’s said that the South lost the war, but won the peace, but it was Wilson’s presidency that sealed the victory. An incorrigible white supremacist, Wilson’s racism was fundamental even to his “idealistic” plans for a peaceful post-WWI world order.…
By Ivan Handler Special to the OUL June 16, 2023 – There has been a continuous stream of extremely impressive technical advances in the world ever since the closing days of WWII. The invention of the computer was in many…
Review of Civil War by Other Means: America’s Long and Unfinished Fight for Democracy by Jeremi Suri (PublicAffairs, 2022) By Matthew E. StanleyJacobin A new book argues that the American right emerged out of a backlash to multiracial democracy following…