
show of force
By VALERIO ARCARY: Sunday's mobilization shows that the social relationship of forces has not reversed. The country remains fragmented, and the extreme right maintains more weight in the politically active part of society
By VALERIO ARCARY: Sunday's mobilization shows that the social relationship of forces has not reversed. The country remains fragmented, and the extreme right maintains more weight in the politically active part of society
By VALERIO ARCARY: Without the black majority, which is the demographic, social, political and cultural majority of the people, a victory against capitalism will never be possible
By VALERIO ARCARY: Diretas Já, as the 1984 days became known, were the largest mass political mobilization in the history of Brazil in the XNUMXth century
By VALERIO ARCARY: One hundred years after Lenin's death, the lack of Leninists has never been so felt
By VALERIO ARCARY: Marx and Engels and anti-capitalist revolutions
By VALERIO ARCARY: Javier Milei’s apocalyptic “tango” is an Argentine version of what Bolsonarism was in Brazil, and the dangers are the same
By VALERIO ARCARY: The long life of Peronism and the future of the left in the post-Lula stage
By VALERIO ARCARY: The main legacy of the International Workers' Association was the irreducible defense of internationalism
By VALERIO ARCARY: At least half a century ago, a debate began, in organizations of the Trotskyist tradition, about the validity of the transition program. Should we defend the letter of the text or the method with which it was prepared?
By VALERIO ARCARY: If Javier Milei were to win, his government would be incompatible with the democratic freedoms won dramatically after the fall of the last military dictatorship
By VALERIO ARCARY: The left cannot make the mistake of underestimating the role of the student movement
By VALERIO ARCARY: The current government is an “abnormal” government because of class collaboration, led by the PT, the largest left-wing party in the country
By VALERIO ARCARY: Considerations on the life of Leon Trotsky's recently deceased grandson
By VALERIO ARCARY: The June 2013 mobilizations were essentially chaotic. Were politically ambiguous and confusing
By VALERIO ARCARY: One should not participate in or support the government unconditionally. But one cannot be, unconditionally, against the government, in the face of the neo-fascist threat
By VALERIO ARCARY: In the 205th anniversary of Karl Marx's birth, capitalism still has yet to be defeated
By VALERIO ARCARY: Lenin came out of almost complete obscurity, outside the ruling circles of the Second International and the radical left, even in Russia, into the pages of history
By VALERIO ARCARY: Without Lenin and the April Theses would Bolshevism have won in October 1917? Without Lula, would the left have defeated Bolsonaro in October 2022?
By VALERIO ARCARY: The movement against pension reform is no longer just a fight against raising the minimum age
By VALERIO ARCARY: “The right to revolution is the only real 'historical right'”
By VALERIO ARCARY: Sunday's mobilization shows that the social relationship of forces has not reversed. The country remains fragmented, and the extreme right maintains more weight in the politically active part of society
By VALERIO ARCARY: Without the black majority, which is the demographic, social, political and cultural majority of the people, a victory against capitalism will never be possible
By VALERIO ARCARY: Diretas Já, as the 1984 days became known, were the largest mass political mobilization in the history of Brazil in the XNUMXth century
By VALERIO ARCARY: One hundred years after Lenin's death, the lack of Leninists has never been so felt
By VALERIO ARCARY: Marx and Engels and anti-capitalist revolutions
By VALERIO ARCARY: Javier Milei’s apocalyptic “tango” is an Argentine version of what Bolsonarism was in Brazil, and the dangers are the same
By VALERIO ARCARY: The long life of Peronism and the future of the left in the post-Lula stage
By VALERIO ARCARY: The main legacy of the International Workers' Association was the irreducible defense of internationalism
By VALERIO ARCARY: At least half a century ago, a debate began, in organizations of the Trotskyist tradition, about the validity of the transition program. Should we defend the letter of the text or the method with which it was prepared?
By VALERIO ARCARY: If Javier Milei were to win, his government would be incompatible with the democratic freedoms won dramatically after the fall of the last military dictatorship
By VALERIO ARCARY: The left cannot make the mistake of underestimating the role of the student movement
By VALERIO ARCARY: The current government is an “abnormal” government because of class collaboration, led by the PT, the largest left-wing party in the country
By VALERIO ARCARY: Considerations on the life of Leon Trotsky's recently deceased grandson
By VALERIO ARCARY: The June 2013 mobilizations were essentially chaotic. Were politically ambiguous and confusing
By VALERIO ARCARY: One should not participate in or support the government unconditionally. But one cannot be, unconditionally, against the government, in the face of the neo-fascist threat
By VALERIO ARCARY: In the 205th anniversary of Karl Marx's birth, capitalism still has yet to be defeated
By VALERIO ARCARY: Lenin came out of almost complete obscurity, outside the ruling circles of the Second International and the radical left, even in Russia, into the pages of history
By VALERIO ARCARY: Without Lenin and the April Theses would Bolshevism have won in October 1917? Without Lula, would the left have defeated Bolsonaro in October 2022?
By VALERIO ARCARY: The movement against pension reform is no longer just a fight against raising the minimum age
By VALERIO ARCARY: “The right to revolution is the only real 'historical right'”