• Monthly Review
  • Monthly Review Press
  • Climate & Capitalism
  • Money on the Left
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Mastadon
MR Online
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact/Submission
  • Browse
    • Recent Articles Archive
    • by Subject
      • Ecology
      • Education
      • Imperialism
      • Inequality
      • Labor
      • Literature
      • Marxism
      • Movements
      • Philosophy
      • Political Economy
    • by Region
      • Africa
      • Americas
      • Asia
      • Australasia
      • Europe
      • Global
      • Middle East
    • by Category
      • Art
      • Commentary
      • Interview
      • Letter
      • News
      • Newswire
  • Monthly Review Essays
  • Zero Euro

    Karl Marx’s birth city sells ‘zero-euro’ bills for his 200th birthday

    Originally published: The Local on April 18, 2018 by DPA (more by The Local)  | (Posted Apr 19, 2018)

    In Rheinland-Pfalz, Marx’s 200th birthday bash is bringing in a lot of capital. Whether the communist philosopher would have been down with this commerce is hard to say.

  • Syria U.S. General

    How the U.S. occupied the 30% of Syria containing most of its oil, water and gas

    Originally published: Mint Press News on April 16, 2018 by Whitney Webb (more by Mint Press News)  | (Posted Apr 18, 2018)

    While gaining control of key resources for partitioning Syria and destabilizing the government in Damascus, the U.S.’ main goal in occupying the oil and water rich northeastern Syria is aimed not at Syria but at Iran.

  • Eleanor Marx

    Eleanor Marx: the Jewess of Jew’s walk

    Originally published: The International Marxist-Humanist on April 6, 2018 by Dana Naomi Mills and Lucy Kaufman (more by The International Marxist-Humanist) (Posted Apr 17, 2018)

    Eleanor Marx changed the world. Foremother of socialist-feminism, trade unionist, internationalist, her father’s first biographer and editor of his key works, she had left a colossal heritage in many spheres of life.

  • Mao

    Mao’s legacy defended, and famous swim decoded, for clueless academics

    Originally published: The Saker on April 15, 2018 by Ramin Mazaheri (more by The Saker) (Posted Apr 17, 2018)

    In late 1965 the rumblings of the Cultural Revolution had begun, due to grumblings over corruption, revisionism (“taking the capitalist road,” selling out socialism, etc.) and the snooty technocratism of urbanites. The party, led by Mao, saw these trends as threats to the common good, the revolution, and the Party’s “Heavenly Mandate” – the millennia-old concept that China’s rulers are chosen by Heaven to rule, and that they must actually display this divinity via perfectly moral conduct and leadership…or else revolt is justified.

  • Money

    Lies, damned lies, and neocolonialism

    Originally published: teleSUR English on April 11, 2018 by Ben King (more by teleSUR English)  | (Posted Apr 16, 2018)

    If we don’t start challenging neoliberal hegemony soon, the non-West will eventually have little choice but to challenge it for themselves.

  • Bolivia's President Evo Morales (second right) attends the plenary session at the Americas Summit in Lima, Peru

    Morales hits back at right-wing national representatives at the Summit of the Americas

    Originally published: Morning Star on April 16, 2018 (more by Morning Star)  | (Posted Apr 16, 2018)

    Bolivian President Evo Morales hit back today at right-wing national representatives, including U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, who attended this weekend’s Summit of the Americas in the Peruvian capital Lima.

  • Members of Jaysh Al-Islam

    War-bent Trump ready to go to bat for Radical Islamic terror group

    Originally published: Mint Press News on April 12, 2018 by Whitney Webb (more by Mint Press News)  | (Posted Apr 14, 2018)

    On the campaign trail and during much of his time as president, Donald Trump has repeatedly railed against “radical Islamic terror,” which he once promised to eradicate “from the face of the Earth.” Less than two years into his presidency, however, Donald Trump has now threatened to attack a sovereign nation, Syria, at the behest of a radical Wahhabi terror group known as Jaysh al-Islam, or the Army of Islam, which seeks to topple Syria’s secular government and replace it with an Islamic state based on an extremist, Wahhabi interpretation of Islam.

  • Growing disdain for America’s false democratic ideals

    Originally published: Asia Times Online on April 10, 2018 by Christina Lin (more by Asia Times Online)  | (Posted Apr 13, 2018)

    In 2017, the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) downgraded the U.S.  democratic system. The EIU has an annual Democracy index that provides a snapshot of global democracy by rating countries on five categories: electoral process and pluralism; civil liberties; functioning of government; political participation; and political culture. They are then classified into four types of governments: full democracy, flawed democracy, hybrid regime, and authoritarian regime.

  • US Territory Divided (Photo: Granma)

    The United States is an oligarchy, not a democracy

    Originally published: Granma on April 4, 2018 by Sergio Alejandro Gómez (more by Granma)  | (Posted Apr 12, 2018)

    In the U.S., any policy change with little support from the upper class has about a one in five chance of becoming law, while those backed by the elites triumph in about half of occasions, even when they go against majority opinion.

  • Who will take on the 21st century tech and media monopolies?

    Originally published: FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting) on April 10, 2018 by Justin Anderson (more by FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting))  | (Posted Apr 12, 2018)

    Facebook is under fire for (among other things) its involvement with Cambridge Analytica, a British data analytics firm funded by hedge fund billionaire and major Republican party donor Robert Mercer and formerly led by President Trump’s ex–campaign manager and strategist Steve Bannon. Cambridge Analytica harvested data from over 87 million Facebook profiles (up from Facebook’s original count of 50 million) without the users’ consent, according to a report by the London Observer (3/17/18) sourced to a whistleblower who worked at Cambridge Analytica until 2014.

  • U.S.-UK-France bomb first ask questions later: a timeline of events in Syria

    Originally published: Mint Press News on April 18, 2018 by Steven Sahouni and contributions from Whitney Webb (more by Mint Press News)  | (Posted Apr 12, 2018)

    The evidence — or lack thereof — of chemical weapons use by Syria is eerily similar to the events that led to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, which was justified using baseless humanitarian accusations that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction.

  • Donald Trump, John Bolton

    Chemical weapons redux: taking the world to the brink of annihilation

    Originally published: Mint Press News on April 10, 2018 by Rick Sterling (more by Mint Press News)  | (Posted Apr 11, 2018)

    Years of chemical weapons allegations, saber rattling and a desperate search for a casus belli have culminated in a situation which risks a serious conflict of world powers.

  • News from Nowhere

    Dreaming of communism: News from Nowhere

    Originally published: Culture Matters on March 31, 2018 by John Ellison (more by Culture Matters)  | (Posted Apr 10, 2018)

    There can be no denying that the content of News from Nowhere, the utopian romance penned by painter, poet and designer William Morris, was heavily indebted to the writings of Karl Marx. Morris was exploring these from the spring of 1882, the year before Marx died and the year of his own 48th birthday. He continued to read Marx, especially Capital, in its French edition, the first English edition being still a few years away.

  • WaPo Syria Photo

    U.S. isn’t leaving Syria—but media lost it when possibility was raised

    Originally published: FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting) on April 6, 2018 by Gregory Shupak (more by FAIR (Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting))  | (Posted Apr 10, 2018)

    At a rally in Cleveland last week, President Donald Trump said that the U.S. will get out of Syria “very soon.” It is now clear that the 4,000 U.S. troops currently occupying Syria (Washington Post, 10/31/17) will in fact stay in Syria (Independent, 4/4/18), even though keeping troops in another country in defiance of that […]

  • Theotonio dos Santos

    Landless Workers’ movement leader: “Lula will be freed if people take to the streets”

    Originally published: Brasil de Fato on April 6, 2018 by Sáo Paulo (more by Brasil de Fato)  | (Posted Apr 09, 2018)

    MST leader João Pedro Stédile says Lula’s imprisonment is “yet another chapter in the coup”

  • Recycling crisis

    Recycling crisis is capitalist business as usual

    Originally published: Red Flag on April 8, 2018 by James Plested (more by Red Flag)  | (Posted Apr 09, 2018)

    Recycling isn’t complicated. Households and businesses separate their recyclables from the rest of their rubbish and put them out for collection. This material then is supposed to be sorted and made into new products–a small but important contribution to sustainability in a world awash with waste.

  • Democrats meeting

    Pelosi and 9 Dems had ‘excellent meeting’ with Netanyahu even as Israel sent ‘dozens of snipers’ to Gaza

    Originally published: Mondoweiss on April 4, 2018 by Philip Welss (more by Mondoweiss)  | (Posted Apr 07, 2018)

    Last Tuesday March 26, Nancy Pelosi led a delegation of ten House Democrats to Israel, where most of them met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu tweeted that night that he’d had an “excellent meeting” with the congresspeople.

  • Protest on 22 March in Marseille - bringing together CGT union strikers, students, civil service workers and others against cuts and neoliberal measures in public services. Photo: Twitter/@cgttuifrance.

    Is France heading for another May ’68?

    Originally published: Counter Fire on April 3, 2018 by John Mullen (more by Counter Fire)  | (Posted Apr 06, 2018)

    Just fifty years ago on March 22nd we saw the beginning of the events in France which terrified the ruling class, led to one of the biggest general strikes ever, along with a wave of factory occupations, and could only be calmed by important concessions from the bosses (minimum wage raised by 35% and new workplace organising rights guaranteed for trade unions). For the first time for decades, the spectre of revolution in the West seemed real.

  • "Tenant Farmer," 1935, by Marie Atkinson Hull (1890-1980), at New Orleans' wonderful Ogden Museum of Southern Art. It is important in going forward to recognize that our political roots in part involve inadequate confrontation of agrarian injustice, which still goes on today.

    Anti-capitalist meetup: A framework for a better and progressively socialist, U.S. farm bill

    Originally published: Daily Kos on April 1, 2018 by Galtisalie (more by Daily Kos)  | (Posted Apr 05, 2018)

    Seriously folks, this is the third and final part in an introductory series on the need for a humane socialist U.S. agriculture policy. (Part 1: www.dailykos.com/…; Part 2: www.dailykos.com/….) For over a year I have been plodding along in my spare time researching, thinking, and writing U.S. agriculture-related pieces from what I will call a progressively socialistic perspective. Along the way I have developed the firm conviction that the lack of a comprehensive practical focus on agricultural issues is a major problem for the U.S. left, politically and programmatically.

  • SOS Racisme

    “We did not feel we belonged to the same Europe as them”

    Originally published: Die Bärliner, The Bard College Berlin Student Blog on March 17, 2018 by Elena Gagovska (more by Die Bärliner, The Bard College Berlin Student Blog) (Posted Apr 05, 2018)

    Given the context of Ernaux’s book, which traces different instances of French and world political history over the span of 66 years, one can clearly infer that the “we” of this passage refers to French people and, by extension, Western Europeans as a larger group. As a Macedonian, I am inclined to think that I am not and probably never will be a part of this “we”.

← Previous
  • 1
  • ...
  • 94
  • 95
  • 96
  • 97
  • 98
  • 99
  • 100
  • 101
  • 102
  • 103
  • ...
  • 115
Next →

Monthly Review Essays

  • The Migrant Genocide: Toward a Third World Analysis of European Class Struggle
    Iker Suarez A banner at a memorial rally for victims of the 2014 massacre of migrants at Tarajal, 2021.

    Over 10,000 people died in transit to Spain in 2024 alone.[1] On June 2022, the border fence of Melilla, one of two Spanish enclaves in Morocco, was witness to a massacre that killed or disappeared over a hundred African migrants.[2]  A recent BBC investigation revealed that Greek border guards systematically repeal immigrants already on Greek […]

Lost & Found

  • Strike at the Helm: The First Ministerial Meeting of the New Cycle of the Bolivarian Revolution
    Hugo Chávez Mural of Chávez in Caracas. (Univision)

    On October 7th, 2012, after hearing of his victory as the nation‘s candidate with 56 percent of the vote, President Hugo Chávez Frias announced from a balcony in his hometown that a new cycle was beginning the very next day, October 8th.

Trending

  • Black citizenship
    The necessity of birthright citizenship for Black People
  • diabetes
    China strikes Diabetes
  • John Bellamy Foster on U.S. Foreign Policy & the “New MAGA Imperialism”
    What is the Trump Doctrine? John Bellamy Foster on U.S. Foreign Policy & the “New MAGA Imperialism”
  • Chilean Communist Party leader Jeannette Jara in a photo composition with sketches of Santiago and the Chilean flag. Photo: Eduardo Ramón/El País.
    Chile: A major victory for the People and the Left, with strategic impact
  • dollars and euros background
    Dollar v Euro
  • Legal & Political Foundations of Capitalism w/ Jamee K. Moudud
  • Picture: Daderot. Public Domain
    China is not a monolith
  • Black Lives Matter protest, London 2020. Photo: Steve Eason / CC BY-NC 2.0
    Where do ideas come from? And how can they change?
  • Zohran Mamdani
    New York Times joins a White Supremacist in attacking Zohran Mamdani
  • Abraham Shield Plan
    The Abraham Shield: Israel’s new blueprint for regional control after Gaza

Popular (last 30 days)

  • Airbus A330-243F cargo aircraft
    Russian and Chinese Military cargo planes shuttling weapons, missiles, supplies into Iran
  • Trump
    Mainstream media ignore Trump’s planned Office of Remigration, a term for ethnic cleansing
  • A person on a crane surveys the ruins of a bombed building, surrounded by smoke.
    The Empire’s Strategic Failure: How the US-Israeli Assault on Iran Accelerated Imperial Decline
  • AP Photo / IRNA/ Mostafa Qotbi
    Iran now first line of defense of BRICS and the Global South
  • Plutonian Mac: December 2017
    Official: U.S.-Israeli deception gave Iran false security ahead of attack
  • Natanz, Iran
    Exclusive: Iran given advance notice as U.S. insisted attack on nuclear sites is ‘one-off’
  • Black citizenship
    The necessity of birthright citizenship for Black People
  • diabetes
    China strikes Diabetes
  • Figure 2 – Credit: Matt Kenard / Declassified 2023
    The urgency of abolishing Britain’s colonial bases in Cyprus
  • A building damaged in an Israeli strike on Tehran, on 13 June 2025 (Atta Kenner/AFP)
    Exclusive: U.S. quietly sent hundreds of Hellfire missiles to Israel before Iran attack

RSS MR Press News

  • EXCERPT: Colonial dreams, racist nightmares, liberated futures (from the introduction to A Land With A People) July 11, 2025
  • LISTEN: Public banking must be definancialized…and democratized (Socialist Register/Thomas Marois on ‘Against the Grain’) July 11, 2025
  • LISTEN: Rafael Barrett’s keen observations, blistering critiques, and anarchist politics (William Costa on ‘Against the Grain’) July 9, 2025
  • The legacy of a Sardinian original (Roses for Gramsci reviewed in ‘Counterpunch’) June 13, 2025
  • LISTEN: Gramsci’s lasting contributions (Andy Merrifield on ‘Against the Grain’) June 6, 2025

RSS Climate & Capitalism

  • ‘Climate tipping points pose catastrophic risks to billions of people’ July 9, 2025
  • Can carbon dioxide removal save the climate? June 29, 2025
  • Global heating isn’t just getting worse. It is getting worse faster. June 19, 2025
  • Ecosocialist Bookshelf, June 2025 June 17, 2025
  • 1.5 is dead: How hot will the Earth get? June 5, 2025

 

RSS Monthly Review

  • July-August 2025 (Volume 77, Number 3) July 1, 2025 The Editors
  • A Special Issue on Communes in Socialist Construction July 1, 2025 Chris Gilbert
  • Venezuela’s Communal Project July 1, 2025 Ángel Prado
  • Socialist Communes and Anti-Imperialism: The Marxist Approach July 1, 2025 Chris Gilbert
  • The Worker-Peasant Alliance in the Transition to Socialism Today July 1, 2025 Prabhat Patnaik

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Creative Commons License

Monthly Review Foundation
134 W 29TH ST STE 706
New York NY 10001-5304

Tel: 212-691-2555