Post by account_disabled on Mar 12, 2024 4:06:56 GMT
Yesterday I watched Perversidad again, that masterpiece by Fritz Lang in which he expertly delves into the personality of a lady similar to Isabel Díaz Ayuso, although not as intelligent, beautiful and insightful as the provincial head of the Madrid movement. It is not my intention to teach anything to the person who holds the highest representation of an Autonomous Community as important as Madrid, but even knowing that it will be sterile work, I allow myself to cite a few communists without whom human life would be more unpleasant, unfair and ugly: Pablo Picasso, Paul Eluard, André Bretón, Louis Aragón, Pier Paolo Passolini, Luchino Visconti, Francesco Rosi, Mario Monicelli, Rafael Alberti, León Felipe, Jacques Derrida, Herbert Marcuse, Ernst Bloch, Walter Benjamin, Ettore Scola, Bernardo Bertolucci , Bertolt Brecht, Antatole France, André Gide, Romain Rolland, Simone de Beauvoir, Jean Paul Sartre, Albert Camus.
Michael Foucault, Víctor Basch, Miguel Hernández, Abraham Polonsky, Pablo Neruda, Vicente Huidobro, John Dos Passos, Máximo Gorki, Maruja Mallo, María Teresa León, Ferdinand Braudel, Eric Hobsbawm, Doris Lessing, André Malraux, Eric Fromm, Margarita Nelken, Silvia Pankhurst, EP Thompson, Maurice Dobb, Chistopher Belgium Mobile Number List Hill, Gordon Childe, Georges Lefebvre, Paul Sweezy, Ángela Davis, Woody Guthrie , Sterlyn Hayden, Lilian Hellman, Dalton Trumbo, John Reed, Wilhelm Reich, Helen Keller, Theodor Adorno, Pete Seeger, George Grosz, Arthur Koestler, Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Amado Nervo, Noam Chonsky, José Saramago, José Bergamín, Leonardo Boff, Louis Altahuser, Edward S. Herman and Óscar Niemeyer. They are part of a list that would take us weeks to complete. Many more could be added to it who, without being communists, shared the ideals of equality, freedom and justice that emanated from socialism.
Such is the case of Charles Chaplin, Albert Einstein, Bernard Shaw, HG Wells, Stephan Zweig, Orson Welles, León Tolstoy, Ernest Heminway, Luis Cernuda or Antonio Machado. To date, communism has not been implemented in any country in the world, nor has the way of life that they say Jesus Christ preached two thousand years ago, quite the opposite. Communism is not a mode of production in which the economy is controlled by the State and run by a bureaucratic hierarchy. It consisted of a transformative ideal of society through which workers would become masters of their own destinies, something that, evidently, has not happened yet. What existed in the USSR was a bureaucratized state capitalism that prevented the freedom of the individual and organized groups.
Michael Foucault, Víctor Basch, Miguel Hernández, Abraham Polonsky, Pablo Neruda, Vicente Huidobro, John Dos Passos, Máximo Gorki, Maruja Mallo, María Teresa León, Ferdinand Braudel, Eric Hobsbawm, Doris Lessing, André Malraux, Eric Fromm, Margarita Nelken, Silvia Pankhurst, EP Thompson, Maurice Dobb, Chistopher Belgium Mobile Number List Hill, Gordon Childe, Georges Lefebvre, Paul Sweezy, Ángela Davis, Woody Guthrie , Sterlyn Hayden, Lilian Hellman, Dalton Trumbo, John Reed, Wilhelm Reich, Helen Keller, Theodor Adorno, Pete Seeger, George Grosz, Arthur Koestler, Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Amado Nervo, Noam Chonsky, José Saramago, José Bergamín, Leonardo Boff, Louis Altahuser, Edward S. Herman and Óscar Niemeyer. They are part of a list that would take us weeks to complete. Many more could be added to it who, without being communists, shared the ideals of equality, freedom and justice that emanated from socialism.
Such is the case of Charles Chaplin, Albert Einstein, Bernard Shaw, HG Wells, Stephan Zweig, Orson Welles, León Tolstoy, Ernest Heminway, Luis Cernuda or Antonio Machado. To date, communism has not been implemented in any country in the world, nor has the way of life that they say Jesus Christ preached two thousand years ago, quite the opposite. Communism is not a mode of production in which the economy is controlled by the State and run by a bureaucratic hierarchy. It consisted of a transformative ideal of society through which workers would become masters of their own destinies, something that, evidently, has not happened yet. What existed in the USSR was a bureaucratized state capitalism that prevented the freedom of the individual and organized groups.