
Epstein files reveal elite emails on cultural control and class bias

Read More »On January 19, 1863, Abraham Lincoln wrote a letter to textile workers in Manchester, England, a city with deep ties to the slave trade, thanking them for their sacrifice and solidarity in supporting an embargo on cotton harvested by enslaved workers.
One of the most significant struggles for workers’ rights began on Jan. 11, 1912, in Lawrence, Massachusetts when thousands of textile workers began a walkout that would come to be known as the Bread and Roses Strike. It was also called the Lawrence Textile Strike and the Singing Strike.
Born from Disco, House music was created as a sanctuary for queer people.
The Queer Roots of House Music
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The following article is an excerpt from Daniel Guerin’s book on Fascism, the English translation of which is soon to be released by Pioneer Publishers. It is a study of the roots and destiny of Fascism, at once so factual and so thoroughly Marxist in its approach, that no apology for giving it the widest possible publicity is necessary. – EDITORS.
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