Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Lovett Fort-Whiteman is the subject of a recent New Yorker article. He was one of a number of black expats who moved to the USSR while Lenin was still living, only to die in a gulag under Stalin.
People who insist that it's about class, not race, are in line with the Party stance back then. Fort-Whiteman, a committed Marxist, argued that in the US people were oppressed based on race as well. The Party had issues with that position, and ultimately he died for it.
This is not the first time I've seen the right echo ideas of Soviet communism, although I wish I could remember the others.
I applaud you for changing things up a bit and not calling your political opponents Nazis for once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Lovett Fort-Whiteman is the subject of a recent New Yorker article. He was one of a number of black expats who moved to the USSR while Lenin was still living, only to die in a gulag under Stalin.
People who insist that it's about class, not race, are in line with the Party stance back then. Fort-Whiteman, a committed Marxist, argued that in the US people were oppressed based on race as well. The Party had issues with that position, and ultimately he died for it.
This is not the first time I've seen the right echo ideas of Soviet communism, although I wish I could remember the others.
A lot of people have no idea they are following Marx, including many liberals who use Marxist analysis with race substituted for class.
Anonymous wrote:Have you looked at Saule Omarova, Biden nominee for comptroller of the currency? Seen what she says? Go look at her wiki.
Anonymous wrote: Lovett Fort-Whiteman is the subject of a recent New Yorker article. He was one of a number of black expats who moved to the USSR while Lenin was still living, only to die in a gulag under Stalin.
People who insist that it's about class, not race, are in line with the Party stance back then. Fort-Whiteman, a committed Marxist, argued that in the US people were oppressed based on race as well. The Party had issues with that position, and ultimately he died for it.
This is not the first time I've seen the right echo ideas of Soviet communism, although I wish I could remember the others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Lovett Fort-Whiteman is the subject of a recent New Yorker article. He was one of a number of black expats who moved to the USSR while Lenin was still living, only to die in a gulag under Stalin.
People who insist that it's about class, not race, are in line with the Party stance back then. Fort-Whiteman, a committed Marxist, argued that in the US people were oppressed based on race as well. The Party had issues with that position, and ultimately he died for it.
This is not the first time I've seen the right echo ideas of Soviet communism, although I wish I could remember the others.
I applaud you for changing things up a bit and not calling your political opponents Nazis for once.
Anonymous wrote: Lovett Fort-Whiteman is the subject of a recent New Yorker article. He was one of a number of black expats who moved to the USSR while Lenin was still living, only to die in a gulag under Stalin.
People who insist that it's about class, not race, are in line with the Party stance back then. Fort-Whiteman, a committed Marxist, argued that in the US people were oppressed based on race as well. The Party had issues with that position, and ultimately he died for it.
This is not the first time I've seen the right echo ideas of Soviet communism, although I wish I could remember the others.
Anonymous wrote: Lovett Fort-Whiteman is the subject of a recent New Yorker article. He was one of a number of black expats who moved to the USSR while Lenin was still living, only to die in a gulag under Stalin.
People who insist that it's about class, not race, are in line with the Party stance back then. Fort-Whiteman, a committed Marxist, argued that in the US people were oppressed based on race as well. The Party had issues with that position, and ultimately he died for it.
This is not the first time I've seen the right echo ideas of Soviet communism, although I wish I could remember the others.
Anonymous wrote: Lovett Fort-Whiteman is the subject of a recent New Yorker article. He was one of a number of black expats who moved to the USSR while Lenin was still living, only to die in a gulag under Stalin.
People who insist that it's about class, not race, are in line with the Party stance back then. Fort-Whiteman, a committed Marxist, argued that in the US people were oppressed based on race as well. The Party had issues with that position, and ultimately he died for it.
This is not the first time I've seen the right echo ideas of Soviet communism, although I wish I could remember the others.