Communism #2

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Issue No. 2 of the International Communist Party’s semi-annual theoretical review presents a unified body of Marxist analyses continuing the invariant line of the Communist Left. Each contribution draws from the living tradition of the Party, reaffirming its programmatic clarity against the distortions of opportunism and reformism.

In this issue:
– Bourgeois Militarism Cannot Stop Proletarian Defeatism
– Race, Class, and the Agrarian Question in the United States (Part 2): Slavery and the Rise of the Bourgeois World
– The Kurdish Question in the Light of Marxism (Part 2)
– The Communist Party of China: The End of China’s Isolation | Chinese Society
– The Ideologies of the Bourgeoisie: Feudalism | Heresies and the Need for Communism
– The Economic and Social Structure of Russia Today (1955): Struggle for Power in the Two Revolutions – Chapters 94–104
– From the Archive of the Left: On the Question of Free Trade – Preface by Frederick Engels (1888) and Marx’s Speech on Free Trade

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Description

Communism, No. 2 (September 2025) is the second issue of the International Communist Party’s semi-annual theoretical review. The publication serves as the Party’s theoretical and historical organ, continuing its effort to restore Marxism to its original revolutionary integrity and to uphold the continuity of the Communist Left. Each issue examines the structure of bourgeois domination and the path toward proletarian reawakening amid global crisis, militarism, and renewed class struggle.

This issue analyzes the economic foundations of imperial militarism and the resurgence of proletarian defeatism; traces class relations through slavery, agrarian exploitation, and colonial accumulation; and studies the evolution of Chinese society and the end of its isolation within the capitalist world market. It continues the demolition of bourgeois ideologies, from feudal mysticism and nationalism to pseudo-radical reformism, and revisits the Russian Revolution to reaffirm the lessons of the Communist Left.

From the archives, classic texts by Marx and Engels on free trade and the law of value illuminate the modern world of financial speculation, global supply chains, and the deepening contradiction between labor and capital. Together, the studies in this issue link past struggles to today’s crises of imperial war, economic collapse, and proletarian disorganization.

Each article reaffirms that Marxism is not an academic pursuit but the living doctrine of a class destined to abolish all forms of exploitation. Through historical analysis and theoretical rigor, Communism stands as the printed organ of the invariant program of the proletarian revolution.