ledlecreeper27

joined 4 years ago
[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 6 points 2 months ago

In English:

In Russian:

[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Biafra secession uses Igbo bourgeois nationalism to try to split Nigeria apart and make its oil-rich regions easier to neocolonize.

[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 7 points 6 months ago

Here's a Soviet book about the history of the Arab countries from the beginning of Ottoman rule in the 1500s to 1918.

[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 12 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Arabic only has three vowels (each can be long or short) but the Turkic languages have many more vowels so the Arabic script couldn't represent the vowels properly. The Mongolian script also has issues with silent letters and spells words like how they sounded several centuries ago. The USSR also changed the spelling of Russian words and removed some letters from the Russian alphabet so words would be spelled how they sound.

[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 6 months ago

There's also a big server called the Gay Motherland.

[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 7 months ago

The Lesson of Germany by Albert Norden

[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 0 points 9 months ago (2 children)

S4A also has a video on this.

[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 9 points 9 months ago

In terms of the effect that striking would have, infrastructure and transportation would be important.

[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 9 months ago (3 children)

The Socialism for All YouTube channel has a lot of audiobooks.

[–] ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 10 months ago

This book talks some about the RCP.

 

A lot of you probably know about An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. I found out that it's actually part of a series along with six other US history books (Afro-American, African American and Latinx, Asian American, Black Women's, Disability, and Queer histories of the US). Has anyone read these other books or knows if they're good? They're all available for free on Libgen or Anna's Archive.

 

A lot of you probably know about An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States by Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz. I found out that it's actually part of a series along with six other US history books (Afro-American, African American and Latinx, Asian American, Black Women's, Disability, and Queer histories of the US). Has anyone read these other books or knows if they're good? They're all available for free on Libgen or Anna's Archive.

 

I found this website that is a leftist alternative to YouTube but has a separate community instead of just reuploading YouTube videos without ads or tracking like the websites in the Tankie Reply Bot on Lemmygrad.

 

I found this website that is a leftist alternative to YouTube but has a separate community instead of just reuploading YouTube videos without ads or tracking like the websites in the Tankie Reply Bot.

 

Spain:

France:

British Isles:

Germany:

Italy:

 

It's from that "research" paper about tankies that came out last year.

 

 

English title: "There is nothing impossible for us" Music by Oscar Feltsman, lyrics by Olga Fadeeva, sung by Askold Besedin

 
95
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by ledlecreeper27@lemmygrad.ml to c/memes@lemmygrad.ml
 
 

Just as modern Zionists claim to be indigenous to Palestine, 19th-century British colonialists in Africa claimed that white people had lived in Africa since ancient times.

When Cecil Rhodes sent in his agents to rob and steal in Zimbabwe, they and other Europeans marvelled at the surviving ruins of the Zimbabwe culture, and automatically assumed that it had been built by white people.

-How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (Walter Rodney), Chapter 2.2g, p. 105

Actually, Europeans were so impressed with what they saw in the interlacustrine zone [in Uganda] that they invented the thesis that those political states could not possibly have been the work of Africans and must have been built at an earlier date by white ‘Hamites’ from Ethiopia. This myth seemed to get some support from the fact that the Bachwezi were said to have been light-skinned. However, in the first place, had the Bachwezi come from Ethiopia they would have been black or brown Africans

-Chapter 4.3c, p. 194

view more: next ›