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| | NEWS & LETTERS, June-July 2006 - Marx's humanism and the mass struggles since World War II |
 | | Zhou Yang notwithstanding, it is not some "bourgeois scholars" who brought Marx's Humanism onto the historic stage, but masses in motion--masses in motion against established Communism, masses in motion against American imperialism, masses in motion against British, French, Belgian imperialism, masses in motion against all existing societies. |
 | | The Marx of 1844 who could write of the Silesian weavers--"the Silesian uprisings began where the French and English uprisings ended, with the consciousness of the proletariat as a class"--needs no lessons in class struggle from a representative of state power in China. |
 | | Stalinism, be it in Russian or Chinese garb, should not be allowed to sully Marx's concept of revolution and vision of the "all-round" man. |
| www.newsandletters.org /Issues/2006/June-July/FTA_June-July_06.htm (983 words) |
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