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1 year ago
The Sierra Leone Civil War
Spartan0King
added to a playlist
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Amputee Camps in Sierra Leone: A Documentary by Ernest Cole, Hope College, 2010
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Children on the Front Line: Sierra Leone
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Conflict in Sierra Leone - True Story of South African Mercenaries
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Soldiers of Fortune - 33 minute documentary - trailer
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Special Assignment - Sierra Leone: Children of War Part 01
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Special Assignment - Sierra Leone: Children of War Part 02
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The Forgotten War: The Sierra Leone Civil War
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Who is Foday Sankoh?
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1 year ago
The Korean War
Spartan0King
added to a playlist
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American Prisoners of War in China! Part 1/5
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American Prisoners of War in China! ! Part 2/5
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American Prisoners of War in China! Part 3/5
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American Prisoners of War in China! Part 4/5
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American Prisoners of War in China! Part 5/5
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Forgotten War, Unforgettable Aftermath
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Korean War (38th to Pusan)
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No Doubt North Korea Sank South Korean Naval Ship!
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War drums: North Korea military 'on combat alert' after South Korea warship row
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About A TRUE MARXMAN
Marxism is a political philosophy, as well as an economic and sociological worldview, which is based upon a materialist interpretation of history, a Marxist analysis and critique of capitalism, a theory of social change, and a view of human liberation derived from the work of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. The three primary aspects of Marxism are:
1. The dialectical and materialist concept of history — Humankind's history fundamentally is a struggle between social classes. The productive capacity of society is the foundation of society, and as this capacity increases over time the social relations of production, class relations, evolve through this struggle of the classes and pass through definite stages (primitive communism, slavery, feudalism, capitalism). The legal, political, ideological and other aspects (e.g. art) of society are derived from these production relations as is the consciousness of the individuals of which the society is composed.
2. The critique of capitalism — Marx argues that in capitalist society, an economic minority (the bourgeoisie) dominate and exploit an economic majority (the proletariat). Marx argues that capitalism is exploitative, specifically the way in which unpaid labour (surplus value) is extracted from the working class (the labour theory of value), extending and critiquing the work of earlier political economists on value. Such commodification of human labour according to Marx, creates an arrangement of transitory serfdom. He argued that while the production process is socialized, ownership remains in the hands of the bourgeoisie. This forms the fundamental contradiction of capitalist society. Without the elimination of the fetter of the private ownership of the means of production, human society is unable to achieve further development.
3. Advocacy of proletarian revolution — In order to overcome the fetters of private property the working class must seize political power internationally through a social revolution and expropriate the capitalist classes around the world and place the productive capacities of society into collective ownership. Upon this, material foundation classes would be abolished and the material basis for all forms of inequality between humankind would dissolve.
Marxism is a political philosophy, as well as an economic and sociological worldview, which is based upon a materialist interpretation of history, a Marxist analysis and critique of capitalism, a theory of social change, and a view of human libera...
Created by
Spartan0KingLatest Activity
Jul 24, 2010Date Joined
Jan 30, 2008About this user
IVE BEEN MANY PLACES AND SEEN DIRTY FACES...CRIMES WITH NO TRACES AND HANGINGS WITH LACES...
SO IS YOUR FAITH WHERE YOU PLACE IT? MAYBE I SHOULD EMBRACE IT...
DELIVER US FROM EVIL, BECAUSE WE'RE ABOUT TO FACE IT....
The Marxist theory of war is quasi-economic in that it states that all modern wars are caused by competition for resources and markets between great (imperialist) powers, claiming these wars are a natural result of the free market and class system. Part of the theory is that war will only disappear once a world revolution, over-throwing free markets and class systems, has occurred.
World revolution is the Marxist concept of overthrowing capitalism in all countries through the conscious revolutionary action of the organised working class. These revolutions would not necessarily occur simultaneously, but where local conditions allowed a revolutionary party to successfully replace bourgeois ownership and rule, and install a workers' state based on social ownership of the means of production.
The end goal is to achieve world socialism, and later, stateless communism
Arguably, the international situation in the years immediately following World War I was the closest the world ever came to such a revolution. The October Revolution of 1917 in Russia sparked a revolutionary wave of socialist and communist uprisings across Europe, most notably the German Revolution, the Hungarian Revolution and the revolutionary war in Finland with the short lived Finnish Socialist Workers' Republic, which made large gains and met with considerable success in the early stages.
Particularly in the years 1918-1919, it seemed plausible that capitalism would soon be swept from the European continent forever. Given the fact that European powers controlled the majority of Earth's land surface at the time, such an event could have meant the end of capitalism not just in Europe, but everywhere. Additionally, the Comintern, founded in March 1919, began as an independent international organization of communists from various countries around the world that evolved after the Russian Civil War into an essentially Soviet-sponsored agency responsible for coordinating the revolutionary overthrow of capitalism worldwide.
" Revolutions are the locomotives of history. "
- Karl Marx
With the prospect of world revolution so close at hand, Marxists were dominated by a feeling of overwhelming optimism, which in the end proved to be quite premature. The European revolutions were crushed one by one, until eventually the Russian revolutionaries found themselves to be the only survivors. Since they had been relying on the idea that an underdeveloped and agrarian country like Russia would be able to build socialism with help from successful revolutionary governments in the more industrialized parts of Europe, they found themselves in a crisis once it became clear that no such help would arrive.
After those events and up until the present day, the international situation never came quite so close to a world revolution again. As fascism grew in Europe in the 1930s, instead of immediate revolution, the Comintern opted for a Popular Front with liberal capitalists against fascism; then, at the height of World War II in 1943, the Comintern was disbanded on the request of the Soviet Union's Western allies.
Stateless communism, also known as pure communism, is the post-capitalist stage of society which Karl Marx predicted would inevitably result from the development of the productive forces. Stateless communism is closely related and connected to world communism.
Strictly speaking, pure communism is a stage of social development where material and productive forces are advanced to a degree where actual freedom (freedom from necessity, and thus from wage labor and alienation from work) for every person is possible. The state apparatus becomes redundant because classes cease to exist.