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  • Actually Existing Socialism Does Not Start and End with Marx

    March 2, 2026

    Dylan Prunster argues why its wrong to use Marx as a “checklist” to assess Actual Existing Socialism. →

  • Marxist-Leninist Internationalism

    February 15, 2026

    This article sets out the positions Marxist Leninists are taking on international questions: our principles for anti-imperialist solidarity, their historical origins, and why they remain materially relevant. →

  • From Liberalism to Fascism: An Analysis of the Social Basis of Fascism

    January 14, 2026

    With the global rise of the far right, the organised left needs to be crystal clear about the class basis of fascism, Adam Watson writes. →

  • China: the proletariat dictatorship continues – a reply to Doug Lorrimer

    November 16, 2025

    Dylan Prunster examines the class character of China today. →

  • The Way Forward for Red Ant: Our Tasks and Strategy

    October 11, 2025

    This article contains three internal Red Ant documents circulated over the last year. →

  • The White “Coolie” and the International Man – Australian Bolsheviks Part 2

    August 28, 2025

    Motega continues to trace the legacies of Comrade Artyom and Paul Freeman in part 2 of this series on Australian Bolsheviks. →

  • melancholias and desires part 2

    August 4, 2025

    Stanley Thomson continues the discussion of left melancholia. →

  • Krupskaya on Revolutionary Self-Education

    April 18, 2025

    The writings of Nadezhda Krupskaya still provide crucial insights into how Communists can structure their self-education. →

  • The Long Transition Toward Socialism and the End of Capitalism by Torkil Lauesen

    April 15, 2025

    Stanley Thomson reviews Torkil Lauesen’s The Long Transition Toward Socialism and the End of Capitalism →

  • The Ideal Fascism

    April 11, 2025

    Since its publication in 1995, Umberto Eco’s seminal essay Ur-Fascism has earned far-reaching acclaim for its ambitious attempt to distil fascism’s essence into a transhistorical framework. Yet Eco’s framework, however analytically seductive, risks divorcing fascism from the political-economic contingencies that birthed it. →

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