A Century of Struggle: The Story of the CPC
A new documentary brings the story of the Communist Party of Canada to life.
A new documentary brings the story of the Communist Party of Canada to life.
Looking across the globe at U.S.-supported opposition movements in Cuba, Venezuela, Belarus, and elsewhere, progressive organizations and individuals would do well to keep the so-called “Hungarian Revolution” in mind.
These articles, detailing the inhuman maltreatment and violence perpetrated against Indigenous people in the colonial residential school system, date back to 87 years ago — but they prove that this recent discovery was not an isolated incident, nor was it simply evidence of a so-called “dark chapter in Canadian history”.
Un spectre hante l’Amérique du Nord – le spectre de la cancel culture…
This May marks the Centenary of the Communist Party of Canada – Parti communiste du Canada (CPC-PCC).
Brown’s attempts to conflate socialism and fascism under the umbrella of “totalitarianism” are hardly anything original. Rather, they place him in a shameful tradition of historical revisionism amongst some of the most infamous bourgeois academics and other ruling class mouthpieces.
From December 25 to 29, 1920, thousands of delegates of the French Section of the Workers’ International (2nd International) met at the Salle du Manège in Tours to solve a fundamental question, namely, whether the French Socialists would join the Communist International or “keep the house” of the SFIO.
Celebrating 85 years of militancy and unified struggle against unfair wages, poor working conditions, and police brutality
By Brendan Campisi. Originally published in 2016.
By Tyson Riel Strandlund