Communism #3

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Issue No. 3 of the International Communist Party’s semi-annual theoretical review continues Communism as a disciplined organ of Marxist continuity and programmatic struggle. Against the accelerating drive toward imperialist war and the ideological fog that accompanies it, this issue reasserts the Communist Left’s invariant method: the primacy of class, the historical thread of revolutionary doctrine, and the critique of every bourgeois consolation—pacifism, democratic moralism, sociological chatter, and all “human” reformisms—that serve only to bind proletarian revolt to the needs of capital.

In this issue:
– How the Working Class Takes the Field Against Imperialist War
– Race, Class & The Agrarian Question in the United States (Part 2): Slavery and the Rise of the Bourgeois World
– The Origins of the Communist Party of China (Part 3): Until the First Congress, July 1921
– The Ideologies of the Bourgeoisie (Part 4): Medieval Aristotelianism, Averroism, Ockhamism
– Alienation, Sex, Love and Crisis of Human Relations in Capitalism
– The Economic and Social Structure of Russia Today (1955): Struggle for Power in the Two Revolutions — Chapters 105–120

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Description

Communism, No. 3 (December 2025) is the third 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 material basis of bourgeois domination and the tasks of proletarian reawakening amid global crisis, militarism, and the disaggregation of social life under capital.

This issue confronts the capitalist drive toward imperialist war and reaffirms proletarian defeatism as the only class standpoint opposed to the national war effort. It continues the investigation of race, class, and the agrarian question in the United States through the history of slavery and bourgeois expansion, tracing the formation of modern class relations through forced labor, land conquest, and commodity production. It follows the early formation of the Communist Party of China up to the First Congress (July 1921), situating it within the international revolutionary wave and China’s deepening insertion into the world market.

Alongside these studies, the series on bourgeois ideology advances into medieval philosophical foundations—Aristotelianism, Averroism, Ockhamism—showing how ruling thought repeatedly converts historical relations of power into metaphysical necessities. A further article addresses alienation and the crisis of human relations under capitalism, rejecting moralism and psychology in favor of the material critique of wage labor and commodity society. The issue continues the long study of Russia’s economic and social structure (1955), returning to the struggle for power in the two revolutions and to the lessons of defeat and counterrevolution.

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