Appeal of the International Luxemburgist Network to the proletariat on May Day

"When the proletariat discovers that its own externalized power collaborates in the constant reinforcement of capitalist society, not only in the form of its labor but also in the form of unions, of parties, or of the state power it had built to emancipate itself, it also discovers from concrete historical experience that it is the class totally opposed to all congealed externalization and all specialization of power. It carries the revolution which cannot let anything remain outside of itself..."

Guy Debord, Society of the Spectacle, § 114

Declaration in the face of the repression of the Chilean Capitalist State

What is the International Luxemburgist Network? Why this organization now? (Statement of agreement)

What follows is the basic statement of the agreement approved by the members of the ILN. Anyone having a general agreement with can thus contact us and join the Network.

The International Luxemburgist Network is a new organization of militants who are in general agreement with the ideas of Rosa Luxemburg. Our aim, as members of the working class, is to help in the organizing of a world revolution to end capitalism, contributing our perspectives based on radical socialism and democracy.

Mass Strike N° 2


The Mass Strike Volume 1 Number 2, published December 2009, is now online. The .pdf version is attached below.

In this issue:

What is the International Luxemburgist Network? Why this organization now?

On the question of revolutionary organization : the case of the NPA in France

Like ears of corn under the rain : the unemployed councils multiply in Spain

On the Question of Revolutionary Organization: the Case of the NPA in France

Has Change Come to Post-Katrina New Orleans? Bush, Obama, and the First 100 Days

Workers Struggles Grow in France: Two Million on the Streets, Universities on Strike

The national general strike on Thursday, Jan 29 in France was a resounding success for the unions, left political parties and many other groups who called it, with some two million workers in the streets, equal to the largest of recent mobilizations. While in Paris the march of some 200,000 was not exceptionally large, the protests were very widespread, with major demonstrations in dozens of cities that have rarely seen such marches. Support for the strike in the opinion polls was high as well, with 70% of the French agreeing with the aims of the strike.

For a Worker’s Recovery Plan - The Causes and Cures of a New Great Depression

Collapse of global steel production

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