
Tag: Vladimir Lenin
Shaping Society: The Intersection of Art, Ideology, and Power

Explainer: This is just a sampling of my ongoing research for a project on social conditioning. There’s a vast amount of material to explore, and I’m still figuring out how to weave it all together. My hope is to someday write a book or at least compile a comprehensive piece on this topic.
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Two New Poems, Still in Limbo
While I wait for Medium to let me post again, here are two of my most recent poems. I’ve uploaded my poetry book draft here too. It’s missing page numbers, a table of contents, and maybe a little dignity. The formatting’s rough. The vibe’s a bit dorky. But it’s alive.
Read More »Vladimir Lenin: The Military Programme of the Proletariat Revolution
Among the Dutch, Scandinavian and Swiss revolutionary Social-Democrats who are combating the social-chauvinist lies about “defence of the fatherland” in the present imperialist war, there have been voices in favour of replacing the old Social-Democratic minimum-programme demand for a “militia”, or “the armed nation,” by a new demand: “disarmament.” The Jugend-Internationale has inaugurated a discussion on this issue and published, in No. 3, an editorial supporting disarmament. There is also, we regret to note, a concession to the “disarmament” idea in R. Grimm’s latest theses. Discussion have been started in the periodicals Neue Leben and Vorbote.
Let us take a closer look at the position of the disarmament advocates.
The Military Programme of the Proletarian Revolution
or: Vladimir Lenin Collected Works Vol. 23 (PDF)
Che Guevara
Against Vulgarising the Slogan of Self-Criticism
The slogan of self-criticism must not be regarded as something temporary and transient. Self-criticism is a specific method, a Bolshevik method, of training the forces of the Party and of the working class generally in the spirit of revolutionary development. Marx himself spoke of self-criticism as a method of strengthening the proletarian revolution. 1 As to self-criticism in our Party, its beginnings date back to the first appearance of Bolshevism in our country, to its very inception as a specific revolutionary trend in the working-class movement.
Rant: The Empire Is Drowning—And It’s Dragging Us With It
This isn’t collapse. It’s choreography. The drowning is designed.

Lenin: Defence of Neutrality
Acceptance of the proposition that the present war is imperialist, i.e., a war between two big freebooters for world domination and plunder, does not yet prove that we should reject defence of the Swiss fatherland. We, Swiss, are defending our neutrality; we have stationed troops on our boundaries for the express purpose of avoiding participation in this robber war!
This is the argument of the social-patriots, the Grütlians, both within the Socialist Party and outside it.
Poem: Fault Lines

Despair is a house with no windows,
where the walls hum with questions
but no one answers.
It is the silence after the sirens,
the stillness that mimics peace
but tastes like surrender.
They say evil is a shadow—
but shadows need light to exist.
What if it’s not a shadow,
but the architecture itself?
The blueprint etched in centuries,
the scaffolding of profit and power
draped in velvet myths.
I sat in that house for years,
thinking the rot was mine.
That the cracks in the ceiling
were symptoms of my softness.
But then I learned to name the mold,
to trace the fault lines
back to hands I never shook.
Struggle is not a war cry.
It is the quiet refusal
to mistake the cage for the sky.
It is patience sharpened into blade,
waiting not for rescue,
but for the moment the hinges loosen.
And when the door gives way—
not with glory, but with grit—
I will not run.
I will walk,
carrying the map I drew
in the dark.
—Tina Marie
Author’s Note:
Lenin’s words suggest that despair is not a personal failing, but a symptom of disconnection—from history, from clarity, from struggle itself. Fault Lines is my attempt to trace that disconnection, not as a descent into hopelessness, but as a quiet reckoning. What if despair isn’t the absence of light, but the architecture we’ve inherited? And what if struggle begins not with noise, but with naming?
Love and Revolution: The Inessa-Lenin-Krupskaya triangle
“If you fall in love with a struggle, it is easy to fall in love with those who share that struggle and vice versa.”
👀
Related:
PDF: The Woman Worker
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