New York meeting on the 90th anniversary of the Russian Revolution The
prospects for socialism in the twenty-first century 13 December 2007
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Ninety years ago, the Russian working class, under the leadership of the
Bolshevik Party, took power, establishing the first workers' state. This
achievement—the product of decades of political and theoretical struggle
within the Russian and international revolutionary movement—"shook the
world." It was the greatest political event of the twentieth century,
profoundly affecting the subsequent course of history.
Nearly three quarters of a century later, in December 1991, the final
collapse of the Soviet Union was proclaimed by defenders of capitalism the
world over—politicians, pundits and academics alike—as the failure of
socialism and communism; even, as one writer put it, "the end of history."
But the demise of the USSR was the result not of socialism, but of
Stalinism—the reactionary nationalist program of "socialism in one country"
adopted by Joseph Stalin and the bureaucratic regime he came to lead, based
on the rejection of the internationalist program and principles that had
animated the October Revolution under the leadership of Lenin and Trotsky.
How and why did Stalinism emerge? Was it the inevitable result of the
revolution itself? Or did the betrayal of the revolution, and the eventual
murder of all of its finest representatives, including Leon Trotsky, arise
out of a series of complex historical conditions—above all, the isolation of
the first workers' state following the defeat of a series of revolutions in
Europe and China—that must be seriously examined in order to understand this
immense and vital strategic experience of the international working class?
Ninety years on, what is the relevance of the Russian Revolution to the
situation confronting ordinary working people today?
The events of 1917 were triggered by the breakdown of world capitalism,
expressed in the outbreak of World War I and the unparalleled carnage that
followed, as each of the great powers of the day sought to carve out for
themselves markets, resources and spheres of influence against their rivals.
In the first decade of the twenty-first century, the working class stands on
the precipice of another world conflagration, this time caused by the
historic economic, social and political decline of the United States, and
its attempt to assert its world domination through military means against
its rivals in Europe and Asia. Militarism and war again threaten mankind,
with potentially catastrophic consequences.
Fred Choate of Mehring Books—editor of the works of Aleksandr Voronksy, the
Left Oppositionist and leading figure in post-revolutionary intellectual
life; and translator of Vadim Rogovin, the Soviet historian of socialist
opposition to the Stalinist regime—will speak on the historical significance
of the Russian Revolution.
*New York, New York*
Saturday, December 15
2:00 - 4:00 p.m.
McBurney YMCA
124 West 14th Street
(between 6th and 7th Avenues, Manhattan)
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